(2024-01-24, 06:40 PM)sbu Wrote: In a complete vacuum, there is no matter, and therefore, there is no temperature. Temperature is a property of matter and depends on the kinetic energy of particles within a substance. In a vacuum, there are no particles to have kinetic energy, so the concept of temperature as we understand it does not apply. The absence of matter and particles means there is no temperature in a true vacuum.
There may be no matter in a certain volume of space, but there will always be radiation. Measuring that and using Plank's law, you get a temperature. The JWST cooled to 25 K, so assuming that was the limit of its cooling, 25 K can be considered to be the temperature of the surrounding space! I know the concept sounds a bit weird, but my point is that space is never devoid of radiation - so looking out into space and finding some thermal radiation doesn't need an extra explanation, and therefore cannot be used as evidence of something else.
If there really is a difference between gas and the emptiness of outer space, how is this described in terms of an equation?
Using that equation (which I don't think exists), it would be possible to determine exactly how rarefied the gas can become before it lo-longer can be said to have a temperature. If we were only talking about the kinetic energy of the molecules, that distinction would not matter, but the energy in the form of far infra-red electromagnetic waves would seemingly have to be distributed differently in a pure vacuum as opposed to a partial vacuum!
Again, what I suspect, but unfortunately can't prove, is that the matter and radiation inside a box (real or imaginary) will store energy in accordance to Plank's law for some temperature T, assuming it is at equilibrium.
David