cryogenics

     

In physics or engineering, cryogenics is the stuy of the production of very low temperatures (below –150 °C, –238 °F or 123 K) and the behavior of materials at those temperatures. Rather than the familiar temperature scales of Fahrenheit and Celsius, cryogenicists use the Kelvin (and formerly Rankine) scales.

Trivia about cryogenics

  • This physics term refers to the study of the effects of extremely low temperatures
  • This physics term refers to the study of extremely low temperatures
  • Lev Landau won a 1962 Nobel Prize for working in low-temperature physics, also known as this