Originally Posted by
kfson
Why isn't absolute zero colder? If absolute zero can't get colder, then cold can not be the absence of heat. So, what really is cold?
By international agreement, absolute zero is defined as 0K on the Kelvin scale and as −273.15°C on the Celsius scale.[1] Absolute zero is also defined as 0R on the Rankine scale (similar to Kelvin but measured in Fahrenheit intervals) and −459.67° on the Fahrenheit scale.
In a nutshell, science says that when particles are in motion, heat is generated; the more a particle is moving, the warmer that thing is; inversely (glad that popcorn commercial used that term) the slower a particle is moving the colder it is. Absolute zero is the closest a particle can get without ceasing to stop altogether. SO HOT AND COLD IS ALL ABOUT MOTION!
Oh, and I'm not sure what one form I would do, either Beijing 24 or Dingshibazhang, but there are so many cool forms out there...
Last edited by Tao Of The Fist; 02-22-2010 at 03:14 PM.
Although the changes are infinite, the principles are the same.
- Wang Tsung Yueh
To win one hundred victories in one hundred battles is not the highest skill. To subdue the enemy without fighting is the highest skill.
- Sun Tzu
Boards don't hit back.
- Bruce Lee