1 E-12 K
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To help compare different orders of magnitude this page lists temperatures between 1 picokelvin (10-12 K) and 1 nanokelvin (10-9 K).
- Temperatures lower than 1 pK: see Absolute zero: 0 K (−273.15 °C or −459.67 °F), the freezing point of all atomic movement
- 250 pK (2.5 × 10-10 K) – Lowest temperature ever produced [1] (http://boojum.hut.fi/research/magnetism/zero.html), during an experiment on nuclear magnetic ordering in the Helsinki University of Technology's Low Temperature Lab.
- 450 pK (4.5 × 10-10 K) – Lowest temperature Bose-Einstein condensate ever achieved in the laboratory; at MIT within sodium gas. [2] (http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/09/11/cold_sodium030911)
- Temperatures higher than 1 nK