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Coldest Place in the Universe

Chris Gondek writes "The Sydney Morning Herald has an article on how NASA has released a high-quality image of the coldest place found in the universe. Five thousand light years from Earth in the constellation of Centaurus, the nebula, a gas cloud formed from a dying star, has a temperature of minus 272 degrees. It is only one degree warmer than absolute zero, the coldest possible temperature, when atoms cease to vibrate and radiate no heat whatsoever. This radiation is the remnant of the Big Bang, the explosion which forged the universe in trillion-degree temperatures. More than 11 billion years later, this heat has cooled to minus 270 degrees, but is still detectable."

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  1. Re:Grumble, grumble - absolute zero by Tempest · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Actually, there is another method of cooling an object, you physically slow it's atomic vibration. It's been demonstrated down to at least 0.0000001 C above absolute zero (see NASA's site) using lasers and magnetic traps. Research utilizing the technique include Bose-Einstein Condensates and Superfluids.
    ~~~~~Chris Giorgi~~~~~