Orders of magnitude (temperature) explained

List of orders of magnitude for temperature

FactorMultipleItem
00 KAbsolute zero

free bodies are still, no interaction within or without a thermodynamic system

10−301 qKParticular speeds bound paths to exceed size and lifetime of the universe, i.e. the particles total path traveled (but not the distance from its place of origin) since the beginning of the universe is less than the size of the universe
(see least-energy in orders of magnitude (energy))
10−181 aKMacroscopic teleportation of matter can occur
Hawking temperature of supermassive black holes
10−151 fKAtomic waves coherent over centimeters
atomic particles decoherent over centimeters
10−121 pK38 pK, lowest laboratory-produced temperature, achieved through matter-wave lensing of rubidium Bose-Einstein condensates.[1]
450 pK, lowest temperature sodium Bose–Einstein condensate gas ever achieved in the laboratory, at MIT[2]
10−91 nK50 nK, Fermi temperature of potassium-40
critical temperature of alkali Bose–Einstein condensates
10−61 μKNuclear demagnetization
Doppler-cooled refrigerants in laser cooling and magneto-optical traps
10−31 mKRadio excitations
1.7 mK, temperature record for helium-3/helium-4 dilution refrigeration, and the lowest temperature which may be sustained for arbitrarily long time with known techniques.
2.5 mK, Fermi melting point of helium-3
60 mK adiabatic demagnetization of paramagnetic molecules
300 mK in evaporative cooling of helium-3
700 mK, helium-3/helium-4 mixtures begin phase separation
950 mK, melting point of helium at 2.5 megapascals of pressure- All 118 elements are solid at or below this temperature.
microwave excitations
11 K1 K at the Boomerang Nebula, the coldest natural environment known
1.5 K, melting point of overbound helium
2.19 K, lambda point of overbound superfluid helium
2.725 K, cosmic microwave background
4.1 K, superconductivity point of mercury
4.22 K, boiling point of bound helium
5.19 K, critical temperature of helium
7.2 K, superconductivity point of lead
9.3 K, superconductivity point of niobium
10110 KFermi melting point of valence electrons for superconductivity
14.01 K, melting point of bound hydrogen
20.28 K, boiling point of bound hydrogen
33 K, critical temperature of hydrogen
44 K mean on Pluto
53 K mean of Neptune
63 K, melting point of bound nitrogen
68 K mean of Uranus
77.35 K, boiling point of bound nitrogen
90.19 K, boiling point of bound oxygen
92 K, superconductivity point of Y - Ba - Cu - oxide (YBCO)
102100 KInfrared excitations
134 K, highest-temperature superconductor at ambient pressure, mercury barium calcium copper oxide
165 K, glass point of supercooled water
184.0 K (–89.2 °C), coldest air recorded on Earth
192 K, Debye temperature of ice
273.15 K (0 °C), melting point of bound water
273.16 K (0.01 °C), temperature of triple point of water
~293 K, room temperature
373.15 K (100 °C), boiling point of bound water at sea level
647 K, critical point of superheated water
737.5 K, mean on Venus
See detailed list below
1031 kKVisible light excitations
500–2200 K on brown dwarfs (photosphere)
1043 K Curie temperature of iron (point at which iron transitions from ferromagnetic to paramagnetic behavior and loses any permanent magnetism)
1170 K at wood fire
1300 K in lava flows, open flames
1500 K in basalt lava flows
~1670 K at blue candle flame
1811 K, melting point of iron (lower for steel)
1830 K in Bunsen burner flame
1900 K at the Space Shuttle orbiter hull in 8 km/s dive
2022 K, boiling point of lead2074 K, surface temperature of the coolest star, 2MASS J0523-1403
2230 K, Debye temperature of carbon
2320 K at open hydrogen flame
2150–2450 K at open hydrocarbon flame
2900 K, color temperature of halogen lamps, black-body radiation maximum at 1000 nm
3695 K, melting point of tungsten
3915 K, sublimation point of carbon
4231 K, melting point of hafnium carbide
4800 K, 10 MPa, triple point of carbon[3]
5000 K, 12 GPa melting point of diamond[4]
5100 K in cyanogen-dioxygen flame
5516 K at dicyanoacetylene (carbon subnitride)-ozone flame
5650 K at Earth's Inner Core Boundary
5780 K on surface of the Sun
5933 K, boiling point of tungsten
6000 K, mean of the Universe 300,000 years after the Big Bang
7445 K, 850 GPa;[5] 8750 K, 520 GPa;[6] 5400 K, 220 GPa,[7] critical point ofdiamond/solid III
7735 K, a monatomic ideal gas has one electron volt of kinetic energy
8000 K, routinely sustainable temperature in an analytical inductively coupled plasma
8801 K, 10.56 GPa[8] 7020.5 K, 797 MPa,[9] critical point of carbon
Anionic sparks

Ultraviolet excitations

10410 kK10 kK on Sirius A
10–15 kK in mononitrogen recombination
15.5 kK, critical point of tungsten
25 kK, mean temperature of the universe 10,000 years after the Big Bang
26 kK on white dwarf Sirius B
28 kK in record cationic lightning over Earth
29 kK on surface of Alnitak (easternmost star of Orion's belt)
4–8–40–160 kK on white dwarfs
30–400 kK on a planetary nebula's asymptotic giant helium star
36 kK boundary between inner and outer core within Jupiter
37 kK in proton - electron reactions
38 kK on Eta Carinae
46 kK on Wolf–Rayet star R136a1[10]
50 kK at protostar (core)
54.5 kK on ON2 III(f*) star LH64-16[11]
>200 kK on Butterfly Nebula
~300 kK at 17 meters from Little Boy's detonation
Fermi boiling point of valence electrons
X-ray excitations
1061 MK0.8 MK in solar wind
gamma ray excitations
1 MK inside old neutron stars, brown dwarfs, and at gravital deuterium fusion range
1–3–10 MK above Sun (corona)
2.4 MK at T Tauri stars and gravital lithium-6 fusion range
2.5 MK at red dwarfs and gravital protium fusion range
10 MK at orange dwarfs and gravital helium-3 fusion range
15.6 MK at Sun's core
10–30–100 MK in stellar flares
20 MK in novae
23 MK, beryllium-7 fusion range
60 MK above Eta Carinae
85 MK (15 keV) in a magnetic confinement fusion plasma
200 MK at helium star and gravital helium-4 fusion range
230 MK, gravital carbon-12 fusion range
460 MK, gravital neon fusion - disproportionation range
5–530 MK in Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor's plasma
750 MK, gravital oxygen fusion range
1091 GK1 GK, everything 100 seconds after the Big Bang
1.3–1.7 GK, gravital silicon fusion range
3 GK in electron - positron reactions
10 GK in supernovae
10 GK, everything 1 second after the Big Bang
700 GK in quasars' accretion discs
740 GK, Hagedorn temperature or Fermi melting point of pions
10121 TK0.1–1 TK at new neutron star
0.5–1.2 TK, Fermi melting point of hadrons into quark–gluon plasma
3–5 TK in proton - antiproton reactions
3.6 TK, temperature at which matter doubles in mass (compared to its mass at 0 K) due to relativistic effects
5.5 TK, highest man-made temperature in thermal equilibrium as of 2015 (quark–gluon plasma from LHC collisions)[12]
10 TK, 100 microseconds after the Big Bang
45–67 TK at collapsar of a gamma-ray burst
300–900 TK at proton - nickel conversions in the Tevatron's Main Injector
10151 PK0.3–2.2 PK at proton - antiproton collisions 2.8 PK within an electroweak star
10181 EK
10211 ZK
10241 YK0.5–7 YK at ultra-high-energy cosmic ray collisions
10271 RKeverything 10−35 seconds after the Big Bang
10301 QKHagedorn temperature of strings
1032100 QK142 QK, Planck temperature
10331000 QKTheory of everything excitations
1029010260 QKLandau pole of Quantum electrodynamics

Detailed list for 100 K to 1000 K

Most ordinary human activity takes place at temperatures of this order of magnitude. Circumstances where water naturally occurs in liquid form are shown in light grey.

Condition
100 K−173.15 °C−279.67 °F
133 K−140 °C−220  °FMean on Saturn[13]
133 K to 163 K−140 to −110 °C−220 to −160 °FTypical temperature of a whole-body cryotherapy chamber[14]
163 K−110 °C−166  °FMean on Jupiter
165 K−108 °C−163 °FGlass point of supercooled water (Debatable)[15]
175.4 K−97.8 °C−144 °FColdest luminance temperature recorded on Earth (measured remotely by satellite), in Antarctica[16]
183.7 K−89.5 °C−129.1 °FFreezing/melting point of isopropyl alcohol[17]
183.9 K−89.2 °C−128.6 °FColdest officially recorded air temperature on Earth, at Vostok Station, Antarctica on 1983-07-21 01:45 UTC
192 K−81 °C−114 °FDebye temperature of ice
193 to 203 K−80 to −70 °C−112 to −94 °FTypical temperature of a ULT freezer
194.6 K−78.5 °C−109.3 °FSublimation point of carbon dioxide (dry ice)
203.55 K−69.6 °C−93.3 °FColdest officially recorded air temperature in the Northern Hemisphere at Klinck AWS, Greenland (Denmark) on 1991-12-22[18]
205.5 K−67.7 °C−89.9 °FColdest officially recorded air temperature on the Eurasian continent at Oymyakon, USSR on 1933-02-06[19]
210 K−63 °C−80 °FMean on Mars
214.9 K–58.3 °C–72.9 °FColdest annual mean temperature on Earth, at Dome Argus, Antarctica[20]
223.15 K−50 °C−58 °FMean on Earth during Snowball Earth[21] around 650 million years ago
224.8 K−48.4 °C−55.0 °FColdest temperature that water can remain a liquid (see supercooling)
225 K−48 °C−55 °FFreezing/melting point of cottonseed oil
233.15 K−40 °C−40 °FIntersecting point of the Celsius and Fahrenheit temperature scales
Skin may freeze almost instantly at or below this temperature[22]
234.3 K−38.83 °C−37.89 °FFreezing/melting point of mercury
240.4 K−32.8 °C−27.0 °FColdest air temperature recorded in South America, at Sarmiento, Argentina on 1907-06-01
246 K−27 °C−17 °FApproximate average yearly temperature on Mount Everest[23]
249 K–24 °C–11 °FFreezing/melting point of flax seed oil
249.3 K–23.9 °C–11.0 °FColdest air temperature recorded in Africa, at Ifrane, Morocco on 1935-02-11
250 K–23 °C–9 °FColdest air temperature recorded in Australia, at Charlotte Pass, New South Wales, Australia on 1994-06-29
255.37 K–17 °C0 °FColdest brine-ice solution found by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit
255 K–18 °C0 °FFreezing/melting point of almond oil
Typical temperature of a household freezer[24]
256 K–17 °C1 °FFreezing/melting point of sunflower oil
256 K–17 °C2 °FFreezing/melting point of safflower oil
257 K–16 °C3 °FFreezing/melting point of soybean oil[25]
262 K−11 °C12 °FFreezing/melting point of corn oil
263.15 K–10 °C14 °FFreezing/melting point of canola oil
Freezing/melting point of grape seed oil
265 K–8 °C18 °FWhite frost can form below this temperature (see frost)
Freezing/melting point of hemp seed oil
265.8 K–7.2 °C 19 °FFreezing/melting point of bromine
267 K–6 °C21 °FFreezing/melting point of olive oil
Freezing/melting point of sesame oil
271.15 K−2 °C28.4 °FAverage freezing/melting point of oceans, the salinity is around 3.47%.[26] [27]
273.14 K-0.01 °C31.98 °FMaximum temperature of an object causing frostbite
273.15 K0.00 °C32.00 °FFreezing/melting point of fresh water (at 1 atm pressure)
273.16 K0.01 °C32.02 °FTriple point of fresh water
276 K3 °C37 °FFreezing/melting point of peanut oil[28]
277 K3.85 °C39 °FTypical temperature of a household refrigerator
277.13 K3.98 °C39.16 °FWater is at maximum density[29]
279.8 K6.67 °C44 °FThreshold of skin numbness if skin reaches this temperature
283.2 K10 °C50 °FMinimum temperature for most plant growth (see Growing degree-day)
286.9 K12.7 °C54.9 °FColdest body temperature of a human that survived accidental hypothermia (a 2-year-old boy in Racławice, Poland, on November 30, 2014)[30] [31]
287.6 K14.44 °C58 °FCold threshold of pain if skin reaches this temperature
288 K15 °C59 °FMean on Earth
291.6 K18.4 °C65.1 °FHottest temperature in Antarctica, recorded on 2020 February 6 at the Esperanza Base[32]
294 K21 °C70 °FCommonly defined value for room temperature
296 K23 °C73 °FMean on Earth during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum[33] about 55.8 million years ago
297 K24 °C75 °FMelting/freezing point of palm kernel oil
298 K25 °C77 °FMelting/freezing point of coconut oil
300 K27 °C81 °FThermoneutral temperature of an unclothed human at rest[34] [35]
Estimated melting/freezing point of francium
302.9 K29.8 °C85.6 °FMelting/freezing point of gallium
303.15 K30 °C86 °FThe rate of plant growth is typically no greater above this temperature than at this temperature. (see Growing degree-day)
304 K31 °C88 °FMelting/freezing point of butter, critical point for carbon dioxide
307 K34 °C93 °FAutoignition temperature of white phosphorus
307.6 K34.4 °C93.9 °FHottest annual mean temperature on Earth, at Dallol, Ethiopia
308 K35 °C95 °FHypothermic body temperature for humans (see Hypothermia)
Warmest sea measured, at the Red Sea
Melting/freezing point of palm oil
309.5 K36.4 °C97.5 °FAverage body temperature for a human[36]
311.03 K37.87 °C100.2 °FBeginnings of a fever for humans
311.8 K38.6 °C101.5 °FAverage body temperature for a cat[37]
313.15 K40 °C104 °FMaximum standard temperature recommended for hot tub users[38]
315 K42 °C108 °FUsually fatal human fever
317.6 K44.44 °C112 °FHot threshold of pain if skin reaches this temperature
319.7 K46.5 °C115.7 °FHighest human fever survived (Willie Jones)[39]
321.45 K48.3 °C119 °FWorld's hottest air temperature recorded while raining, at Imperial, California, USA on July 24, 2018[40]
322.1 K48.9 °C120.0 °FHottest air temperature recorded in South America, at Rivadavia, Argentina on 1905-12-11
Maximum safe temperature for hot water according to numeric U.S. plumbing codes[41]
Water will cause a second-degree burn after 8 minutes and a third-degree burn after 10 minutes
323.14 K49.99 °C121.99 °FHalf-way point between freezing and boiling
323.9 K50.7 °C123.3 °FHottest air temperature recorded in the Southern Hemisphere, at Oodnadatta, Australia on 1960-02-01[42]
329.87 K56.7 °C134.1 °FHottest measured air temperature on Earth, in Death Valley at Furnace Creek, Inyo County, California, United States of America on 10 July 1913.[43]
333.15 K60 °C140 °FWater will cause a second-degree burn in 3 seconds and a third-degree burn in 5 seconds
Average temperature of a hair dryer
336 K63 °C145.4 °FMilk pasteurization
342 K69 °C157 °FBoiling point of water on the summit of Mount Everest[44]
343.15 K70 °C158 °FFood is well done
Hot springs at which some bacteria thrive[45]
350 K77 °C170 °FPoaching of food
351.52 K78.37 °C173.07 °FBoiling point of ethanol
353.15 K80 °C176 °FAverage temperature of a sauna
355 K82 °C180 °FRecommended final rinse temperature in industrial-grade commercial dishwashers[46]
355.6 K82.4 °C180.3 °FBoiling point of isopropyl alcohol
366 K93 °C200 °FSimmering of food
367 K94 °C201 °FHottest ground temperature recorded on Earth at Furnace Creek, Death Valley, California, USA on 1972-07-15[47]
371 K98 °C209 °FFreezing/melting point of sodium
373.13 K99.98 °C211.97 °FBoiling point of water at 1 atm pressure (see Celsius)
380 K107 °C225 °FSmoke point of raw safflower oil
Syrup is concentrated to 75% sugar
388 K115 °C239 °FMelting/freezing point of sulfur
400 K127 °C260 °FConcorde nose tip during supersonic flight
Coldest known stars in space (approximate temperature)[48]
433.15 K160 °C320 °FSyrup is concentrated to 100% sugar
Sucrose (table sugar) caramelizes
450 K177 °C350 °FMean on Mercury
Smoke point of butter
Deep frying
453.15 K180 °C356 °FPopcorn pops
483 K210 °C410 °FAutoignition (kindling) point of diesel fuel
491 K218 °C425 °FKindling point of paper
519 K246 °C475 °FKindling point of automotive gasoline
522 K249 °C480 °FKindling point of jet fuel (Jet A/Jet A-1)[49]
525 K252 °C485 °FSmoke point of milkfat
Kindling point of jet fuel (Jet B)
538 K265 °C510 °FSmoke point of refined safflower oil
574.5875 K301.4375 °C574.5875 °FIntersecting point of the Fahrenheit and Kelvin temperature scales
600.65 K327.5 °C621.5 °FMelting/freezing point of lead
647 K374 °C705 °FCritical point of superheated water
693 K419 °C787 °FMelting/freezing point of zinc
723.15 K450 °C842 °FKindling point of aviation gasoline
738 K465 °C870 °FMean on Venus
749 K476 °C889 °FKindling point of magnesium
773.15 K500 °C932 °FOven on self-cleaning mode
798 K525 °C977 °FDraper Point (the point at which nearly all objects start to glow dim red)[50]
858 K585 °C1085 °FKindling point of hydrogen[51]
933.47 K660.32 °C1220.58 °FMelting/freezing point of aluminium
1000 K726.85 °C1340.33 °F
Detailed list from 0 K to 142 QK-273.15 Celsius Absolute Zero, nothing can get colder than this-272.15 Celsius Boomerang Nebula -270 Celsius Outer Space -269 boiling point of helium-259 freezing point of hydrogen-253 condensation point of hydrogen-241 average temperature on Haumea-235 average temperature on Triton

External links

Notes and References

  1. Deppner. Christian. Herr. Waldemar. Cornelius. Merle. Stromberger. Peter. Sternke. Tammo. Grzeschik. Christoph. Grote. Alexander. Rudolph. Jan. Herrmann. Sven. Krutzik. Markus. Wenzlawski. André. 2021-08-30. Collective-Mode Enhanced Matter-Wave Optics. Physical Review Letters. en. 127. 10. 100401. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.100401. 34533345. 2021PhRvL.127j0401D. 237396804. 0031-9007.
  2. Web site: Bose-Einstein condensates break temperature record. 2010-09-27. 2012-04-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20120402094614/http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/18214. dead.
  3. 10.1070/PU2003v046n12ABEH001699 . Melting point of graphite and liquid carbon (Concerning the paper 'Experimental investigation of the thermal properties of carbon at high temperatures and moderate pressures' by EI Asinovskii, A V Kirillin, and a V Kostanovskii) . 2003 . Savvatimskii . Aleksandr I . Physics-Uspekhi . 46 . 12 . 1295–1303. 2003PhyU...46.1295S . 250746507 .
  4. 10.1021/jp076049+ . Size-Dependent Temperature-Pressure Phase Diagram of Carbon . 2008 . Yang . C.C. . Li . S. . Journal of Physical Chemistry C . 112 . 5 . 1423–1426.
  5. 10.1073/pnas.0510489103 . Carbon under extreme conditions: Phase boundaries and electronic properties from first-principles theory . 2006 . Correa . A. A. . Bonev . S. A. . Galli . G. . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . 103 . 5 . 1204–8 . 16432191 . 1345714. 2006PNAS..103.1204C . free .
  6. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.95.185701 . 16383918 . Carbon Phase Diagram from Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics . 2005 . Wang . Xiaofei . Scandolo . Sandro . Car . Roberto . Physical Review Letters . 95 . 18 . 185701 . 2005PhRvL..95r5701W. 15373344 .
  7. Gerald I. Kerley and Lalit Chhabildas, "Multicomponent-Multiphase Equation of State for Carbon", Sandia National Laboratories (2001)
  8. 10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.4659 . Liquid-Liquid Phase Transformation in Carbon . 1999 . Glosli . James . Ree . Francis . Physical Review Letters . 82 . 23 . 4659–4662 . 1999PhRvL..82.4659G.
  9. 10.1016/0008-6223(85)90083-1 . Thermodynamic properties of liquid carbon . 1985 . Man Chai Chang . Ryong . Ryoo . Mu Shik Jhon . Carbon . 23 . 5 . 481–485. 1985Carbo..23..481M .
  10. 2020MNRAS.499.1918B . The R136 star cluster dissected with Hubble Space Telescope/STIS. II. Physical properties of the most massive stars in R136 . Bestenlehner . Joachim M. . Crowther . Paul A. . Caballero-Nieves . Saida M. . Schneider . Fabian R. N. . Simón-Díaz . Sergio . Brands . Sarah A. . De Koter . Alex . Gräfener . Götz . Herrero . Artemio . Langer . Norbert . Lennon . Daniel J. . Maíz Apellániz . Jesus . Puls . Joachim . Vink . Jorick S. . Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society . 2020 . 499 . 2 . 1918 . 10.1093/mnras/staa2801 . free . 2009.05136 .
  11. 10.1086/420766 . The Physical Properties and Effective Temperature Scale of O-Type Stars as a Function of Metallicity. I. A Sample of 20 Stars in the Magellanic Clouds . 2004 . Massey . Philip . Bresolin . Fabio . Kudritzki . Rolf P. . Puls . Joachim . Pauldrach . A. W. A. . The Astrophysical Journal . 608 . 2 . 1001–1027 . 2004ApJ...608.1001M. astro-ph/0402633 . 119373878 .
  12. Web site: Highest man-made temperature. Guinness World Records. Jim Pattison Group. 16 August 2015.
  13. Web site: Solar System Temperatures - NASA Science . 2023-10-20 . science.nasa.gov . en.
  14. Web site: Whole-Body Cryotherapy FAQs. 9 December 2020 . Coyne Medical. 2023-10-11.
  15. Book: A Journey Through Water: A Scientific Exploration of The Most Anomalous Liquid on Earth. Jestin Baby Mandumpal. Bentham Science Publishers. 2017. 148. 9781681084237.
  16. Web site: New study explains Antarctica's coldest temperature . National Snow and Ice Data Center . 5 May 2021 . 25 June 2018.
  17. Book: Read "Emergency and Continuous Exposure Limits for Selected Airborne Contaminants: Volume 2" at NAP.edu . en.
  18. Web site: World Meteorological Organization's World Weather & Climate Extremes Archive . 2024-01-06 . wmo.asu.edu . en.
  19. http://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/the-coldest-places-on-earth Weather Underground – Coldest Places on Earth
  20. http://www.currentresults.com/Weather-Extremes/ Current Results – Worlds Hottest and Coldest Places
  21. http://www.space.com/9461-snowball-earth-scenario-plunged-planet-million-year-winters.html 'Snowball Earth' Scenario Plunged Our Planet Into Million-Year Winters
  22. http://www.weathernotebook.org/transcripts/2001/02/07.html The Weather Notebook – 40 Below
  23. Web site: Temperature Everest Summit. 30 July 2014 . Himalayan Wonders. 2023-10-11. (Temperature calculated by averaging monthly temperatures given in graph)
  24. Web site: Freezing and food safety . USDA . 6 August 2013 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20130918190328/http://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/portal/fsis/topics/food-safety-education/get-answers/food-safety-fact-sheets/safe-food-handling/freezing-and-food-safety . 18 September 2013 .
  25. Veganbaking.net – Fat and Oil Melt Point Temperatures http://www.veganbaking.net/tools/fat-and-oil-melt-point-temperatures
  26. Web site: Can the ocean freeze? Ocean water freezes at a lower temperature than freshwater.. NOAA. January 2, 2019. July 6, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200706161806/https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/oceanfreeze.html. dead.
  27. Book: Chester, Roy . Jickells, Tim . Marine Geochemistry . 2012 . Blackwell Publishing . 978-1-118-34907-6 .
  28. http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/chem03/chem03265.htm U.S. Dept. of Energy – Office of Science – Oils and Low Temperature
  29. http://www.esf.edu/efb/schulz/Limnology/mixing.html College of Environmental Science and Forestry – Thermal Stratification
  30. Web site: Doctors hail miracle as toddler survives freezing conditions in pyjamas . The Guardian . Agence France Presse in Warsaw . 2014-12-05 . 2015-02-03.
  31. Web site: 2-letni Adaś wyprowadzony z hipotermii. Światowe media donoszą o cudownym dziecku z Polski . 2015-12-05 . 2015-02-03 . Polskie Radio.
  32. Web site: New record for Antarctic continent reported . World Meteorological Organization . 7 February 2020.
  33. https://www.climate.gov/news-features/climate-qa/whats-hottest-earths-ever-been What's the hottest Earth's ever been?
  34. Rintamäki . Hannu . Human responses to cold . Alaska Medicine . 2007 . 49 . 2 Suppl . 29–31 . 17929604 .
  35. https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/cold-out-why-you-need-to-wear-a-hat Harvard Health Publishing - Cold out? Why you need to wear a hat
  36. Harvard Health Publishing - Time to redefine normal body temperature? https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/time-to-redefine-normal-body-temperature-2020031319173
  37. http://people.rit.edu/hmm5837/320/project2/page4.html Rochester Institute for Technology – Random Cat Facts
  38. http://www.jacuzzi.com/hot-tubs/hot-tub-blog/ideal-hot-tub-water-temperature/ . Finding The Ideal Hot Tub Temperature. Jacuzzi
  39. http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/clock.html Biological Rhythums
  40. Web site: Hottest Rain on Record? Rain Falls at 119°F in Imperial, California . 2024-07-26 . www.wunderground.com . en.
  41. Web site: Antiscald Inc . 2014-09-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140913012501/http://www.antiscald.com/prevention/general_info/table.php . 2014-09-13 .
  42. http://wmo.asu.edu/ ASU World Meteorological Organization – Global Weather & Climate Extremes
  43. Web site: Highest recorded temperature. 10 July 1913 . Guinness World Records. 20 August 2018.
  44. http://science.howstuffworks.com/dictionary/chemistry-terms/boiling-info.htm HowStuffWorks – Boiling
  45. Joseph Seckbach, et al.: Polyextremophiles - life under multiple forms of stress. Springer, Dordrecht 2013,, preface; @google books
  46. "Residential Dishwashers". National Sanitation Foundation. Retrieved on 26 May 2017. http://www.nsf.org/consumer-resources/health-and-safety-tips/home-product-appliance-tips/sanitizing-dishwasher/
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