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Absolute Zero
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Viewing Ideas
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Before Watching
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Have students brainstorm all the things and places they can
think of that are cold. List these on the board. Assign groups
to research temperatures of some of these items, including the
coldest place on Earth. When they are done, create a temperature
line that spans 25 degrees C to -273.16 degrees C (absolute
zero). Have students put their items on the temperature line and
note how far their items are from absolute zero.
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Science is a human endeavor undertaken by many individuals of
various backgrounds. Organize students into seven groups. As
they watch the program, have each group take notes on the
following scientists:
- Robert Boyle and Guillaume Amontons
- Antoine Lavoisier and Benjamin Thompson (Count Rumford)
- Michael Faraday
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Sadi Carnot, James Joule, and William Thompson (Lord Kelvin)
- James Dewar and Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
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Eric Cornell, Carl Wieman, Wolfgang Ketterle, and Daniel
Kleppner
Students should record each scientist's nationality, whether the
scientist worked alone or with others, what each did to further
the science of cold, and the tools each used.
After Watching
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Have each group present information about its scientist(s). What
did each scientist learn? What tools were available to each
scientist? How did scientists share information in each time
period? What role did competition play in advancing science?
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Ask students what they would do if they did not have
refrigerators. How has refrigeration changed people's lives? In
what other ways has the ability to control cold been important
to society?
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