Its cold outside and I've been reading up on differnt types of tempreture scales on wikipedia and although the wiki is a great source of information I would like more.
I suppose we all know that 0 K is absolute zero where there is no entropy. From what I can tell the units of both K and C are at the same scale, but I am not clear on how they determined the units of the scale. It is simply that they took 273 C divded by 1 K and that probides the base scale?
Are there any tempreture scales that reflect actual heat engergy in their scale so that 20 units is twice the heat of 10 units?
Is there any estimate to what a maximum heat would look like?
It looks like there have been many scales thoughout time, and C seems to be the international standard, but since the scale of C is arbatrary I was curious if there was a scale that set out to make each unit of measurement reflect actual heat energy.
I suppose we all know that 0 K is absolute zero where there is no entropy. From what I can tell the units of both K and C are at the same scale, but I am not clear on how they determined the units of the scale. It is simply that they took 273 C divded by 1 K and that probides the base scale?
Are there any tempreture scales that reflect actual heat engergy in their scale so that 20 units is twice the heat of 10 units?
Is there any estimate to what a maximum heat would look like?
It looks like there have been many scales thoughout time, and C seems to be the international standard, but since the scale of C is arbatrary I was curious if there was a scale that set out to make each unit of measurement reflect actual heat energy.