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Zeroth Law and Temperature

The zeroth law of thermodynamics establishes that thermal equilibrium is transitive, making temperature a well-defined, measurable property shared by systems in equilibrium.

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Definition

The zeroth law states that if two systems are each in thermal equilibrium with a third system, they are in thermal equilibrium with each other, which allows temperature to be defined as the property that is equal among systems in mutual thermal equilibrium.

Scope

This topic covers the statement of the zeroth law, the notion of thermal equilibrium and the diathermal wall, the transitivity that lets temperature be defined, and the construction of empirical and absolute temperature scales. The operation of thermometers and the ideal-gas scale are included as practical consequences.

Core questions

  • What does it mean for two systems to be in thermal equilibrium?
  • Why does transitivity of equilibrium permit a consistent definition of temperature?
  • How are empirical temperature scales constructed and related to the absolute scale?
  • Why must the zeroth law precede the first and second laws logically?

Key concepts

  • Thermal equilibrium and diathermal walls
  • Transitivity of equilibrium
  • Empirical temperature and isotherms
  • Ideal-gas and absolute temperature scales
  • Thermometry

Clinical relevance

The zeroth law underlies every act of temperature measurement, from laboratory thermometry to industrial process control and meteorology, by guaranteeing that a thermometer reads a property genuinely shared with the system it touches.

History

Although thermometry predates formal thermodynamics by centuries, the principle was articulated as a distinct law and named the 'zeroth law' by Fowler in the 1930s, formalizing the long-implicit basis for measuring temperature.

Key figures

  • Ralph H. Fowler
  • James Clerk Maxwell

Related topics

Seminal works

  • callen1985
  • fowler1939

Frequently asked questions

Why is the zeroth law necessary if temperature seems obvious?
Without transitivity of thermal equilibrium there would be no guarantee that a single number could label a system's hotness consistently; the zeroth law supplies exactly that guarantee, turning temperature from an intuition into a defined state variable.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts