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Does temperature have an upper limit like the lower limit of absolute zero? What's the highest measured value? | Astronomy.com
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Does temperature have an upper limit like the lower limit of absolute zero? What's the highest measured value?

Jane Haldiman, Chicago
RELATED TOPICS: SPACE PHYSICS
ALICE at the Large Hadron Collider

The universe’s “absolute high” temperature correlates to the energy and heat that existed during the Big Bang. The physics rule that energy must be conserved doesn’t allow any more energy than that which existed at the universe’s beginning.

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