Template:Short description The following is a timeline of low-temperature technology and cryogenic technology (refrigeration down to close to absolute zero, i.e. –273.15 °C, −459.67 °F or 0 K).<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> It also lists important milestones in thermometry, thermodynamics, statistical physics and calorimetry, that were crucial in development of low temperature systems.

Prior to the 19th centuryEdit

  • Template:Ca.Zimri-Lim, ruler of Mari in Syria commanded the construction of one of the first ice houses near the Euphrates.<ref name="Dalley2002">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Template:Ca. – The yakhchal (meaning "ice pit" in Persian) is an ancient Persian type of refrigerator. The structure was formed from a mortar resistant to heat transmission, in the shape of a dome. Snow and ice was stored beneath the ground, effectively allowing access to ice even in hot months and allowing for prolonged food preservation. Often a badgir was coupled with the yakhchal in order to slow the heat loss. Modern refrigerators are still called yakhchal in Persian.
  • Template:Ca.Hero of Alexandria knew of the principle that certain substances, notably air, expand and contract and described a demonstration in which a closed tube partially filled with air had its end in a container of water.<ref>T.D. McGee (1988) Principles and Methods of Temperature Measurement Template:ISBN</ref> The expansion and contraction of the air caused the position of the water/air interface to move along the tube. This was the first established principle of gas behaviour vs temperature, and principle of first thermometers later on. The idea could predate him even more (Empedocles of Agrigentum in his 460 B.C. book On Nature).
  • 1396 AD – Ice storage warehouses called "Dong-bing-go-tango" (meaning "east ice storage warehouse" in Korean) and Seo-bing-go ("west ice storage warehouse") were built in Han-Yang (currently Seoul, Korea). The buildings housed ice that was collected from the frozen Han River in January (by lunar calendar). The warehouse was well-insulated, providing the royal families with ice into the summer months.Template:Citation needed These warehouses were closed in 1898 AD but the buildings are still intact in Seoul.
  • 1593 – Galileo Galilei builds a first modern thermoscope. But it is possible the invention was by Santorio Santorio or independently around same time by Cornelis Drebbel. The principle of operation was known in ancient Greece.
  • Template:Ca.–1613 – Francesco Sagredo or Santorio Santorio, put a numerical scale on a thermoscope.
  • 1617 – Giuseppe Biancani publishes first clear diagram of thermoscope
  • 1638 – Robert Fludd describes thermometer with a scale, using air thermometer principle with column of air and liquid water.
  • 1650 – Otto von Guericke designed and built the world's first vacuum pump and created the world's first ever vacuum known as the Magdeburg hemispheres to disprove Aristotle's long-held supposition that 'Nature abhors a vacuum'.
  • 1656 – Robert Boyle and Robert Hooke built an air pump on this design.
  • 1662 – Boyle's law (gas law relating pressure and volume) is demonstrated using a vacuum pump
  • 1665 – Boyle theorizes a minimum temperature in New Experiments and Observations touching Cold.
  • 1679 – Denis Papinsafety valve
  • 1702 – Guillaume Amontons first calculates absolute zero to be −240 °C using an air thermometer of his own invention (1702), theorizing at this point the gas would reach zero volume and zero pressure.
  • 1714 – Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit invented the first reliable thermometer, using mercury instead of alcohol and water mixtures
  • 1724 – Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit proposes a Fahrenheit scale, which had finer scale and greater reproducibility than competitors.
  • 1730 – René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur invented an alcohol thermometer and temperature scale ultimately proved to be less reliable than Fahrenheit's mercury thermometer.
  • 1742 – Anders Celsius proposed a scale with zero at the boiling point and 100 degrees at the freezing point of water. It was later changed to be the other way around, on the input from Swedish academy of science.
  • 1755 – William Cullen used a pump to create a partial vacuum over a container of diethyl ether, which then boiled, absorbing heat from the surrounding air.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • 1756 – The first documented public demonstration of artificial refrigeration by William Cullen<ref>William Cullen, Of the Cold Produced by Evaporating Fluids and of Some Other Means of Producing Cold, in Essays and Observations Physical and Literary Read Before a Society in Edinburgh and Published by Them, II, (Edinburgh 1756)</ref>
  • 1782 – Antoine Lavoisier and Pierre-Simon Laplace invent the ice-calorimeter
  • 1784 – Gaspard Monge liquefied the first pure gas with Clouet producing liquid sulfur dioxide.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Wisiak2003">Wisniak, Jaime. "Louis Paul Cailletet—The liquefaction of the permanent gases." (2003).</ref>
  • 1787 – Charles's law (Gas law, relating volume and temperature)
  • 1799 – Martin van Marum and Adriaan Paets van Troostwijk compressed ammonia to see if it followed Boyle's law. They found at room temperature and 7 atm gaseous ammonia condensed to a liquid.<ref name="Wisiak2003"/>

19th centuryEdit

  • 1802 – John Dalton wrote "the reducibility of all elastic fluids of whatever kind, into liquids"
  • 1802 – Gay-Lussac's law (Gas law, relating temperature and pressure).
  • 1803 – Domestic ice box
  • 1803 – Thomas Moore of Baltimore, Md. received a patent on refrigeration.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

20th centuryEdit

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Bose–Einstein condensate, using a dilute gas of Rubidium-87 cooled to 170 nK. They won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 2001 for BEC.

  • 1999 – D.J. Cousins and others, dilution refrigerator reaching 1.75 mK
  • 1999 – The current world record lowest temperature was set at 100 picokelvins (pK), or 0.000 000 000 1 of a kelvin, by cooling the nuclear spins in a piece of rhodium metal.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

21st centuryEdit

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • 2015 – A team of atomic physicists from Stanford University used a matter-wave lensing technique to cool a sample of rubidium atoms to an effective temperature of 50 pK along two spatial dimensions.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • 2017 - Cold Atom Laboratory (CAL), an experimental instrument launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2018.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The instrument creates extremely cold conditions in the microgravity environment of the ISS leading to the formation of Bose Einstein Condensates that are a magnitude colder than those that are created in laboratories on Earth. In this space-based laboratory, up to 20 seconds interaction times and as low as 1 picokelvin (<math>10^{-12}</math> K) temperatures are projected to be achievable, and it could lead to exploration of unknown quantum mechanical phenomena and test some of the most fundamental laws of physics.<ref name="NASA Cold Atom Laboratory Mission">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="CALnasa">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit