Do CPU's have moving parts? Such as tiny switches or whatever?
Do CPU's have moving parts? Such as tiny switches or whatever?
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Yes
Absolutely fucking yee
>moving parts
Look at one do you see anything mechanical that moves?
Look at a hard drive, do you see anything mechanical that moves?
are electrons moving parts?
This is the state of Sup Forums
Yes
electricity sets either a state of 1 or 0 (whether that particular address is set to 1 or 0 is decided by ram).
so, no, but for brainlet understanding then yes
When you go small enough everything above absolute zero has moving parts.
doesn't look like it's moving to me, pal
You don't deserve to use the internet. You don't even deserve to live.
How about things at truly negative temperatures?
I assume it works in the reverse of normal temperatures and therefore moves
There are no truly negative temperatures, there''s absolute zero and everything above it.
too harsh man, take a walk, it’s christmas eve
If something is possible, the opposite also should be. And therefore energy should be able to flow from lower states to higher states, making it effectively a negative scale.
I mean... electrons move. And transistors are basically just "tiny switches."
I know Nazi CPU's were switch based.
It's called absolute zero because it's the lowest possible temperature. When something's at 0ºK, it has no thermal energy. To achieve a lower temp, you'd have to remove even more thermal energy, which you can't because there's no more to remove.
The "opposite" of something moving this is something moving in the opposite vector. Both things are temperature.
You can have negative temperature gradients, but you can't have negative temperature and more than you can have negative distance.
By my course in Intro to Thermodynamics, you're a dumbass
True patrician thinking is realizing that energy transfer is relative, and that 0K is defined with respect to the vacuum energy. So anything "less" than 0K would have Work done in it by the vacuum
Hello pajeet
By Uncertainty principle this is untrue. Positional variance is small but still present even at absolute zero, this is simply zero point energy. Decoherence is still possible at 0K.
Energy flux does not indicate absolute temperature; absolute temperature is measurable by both entropy and enthalpy; the vacuum energy is simply not 0K, we know this from cosmic background radiation. There are things with theoretically "negative" temperature by determining a local minima of DOF which would theoretically lead to lower entropy as we decrease the temperature within constant volume which is coined "negative temperature" however, and this is very interesting in understanding certain condensed matter physics ideas including fermion-fermion interactions.
>typisch Sup Forums
Prove to me that you can't have negative distance.
>
> What is Brownian motion
Fug
electrons are not things that can move, they fluctuate quantum states though
No a CPU is not mechanical. It only has moving electrons.
Holy shit you're a fucking moron and don't even realize it.
Of course there are negative temperatures. Temperatur is defined in terms of chnage of entropy in regards to energy. If you are in a system whose entropy dscreases when you increase energy you have negative temperatures.
no
wrong
can something go below 0K? no.
which means there are no negative temperatures
if i have two apples and i give one away doesnt means negative apples exist you dumb fuck
No, not by the definition of moving parts in the tech context.
transistors are literally tiny switches
Distance can be 2D or 3D but temperature is one dimensional
Solid state switches. Does not count as moving parts.
This. Temperature in general is an abstract concept, it's just that in kinetic gas theory it's intuitive because of the 1 to 1 link with the mean velocity of the gas particles.