When systems become hotter than infinitely hot
You were taught that absolute zero (0 Kelvin, -273.15°C) is the coldest possible temperature—the point where all molecular motion stops. Nothing can be colder.
That's only half the story.
In certain special systems, temperature doesn't just approach zero—it wraps around through infinity and becomes negative. And here's the mind-bending part: negative temperatures are hotter than positive ones.
The visualization below shows particles distributed across energy levels. At normal temperatures, most particles are in low-energy states (Boltzmann distribution). As temperature increases, the distribution flattens. At infinite temperature, all levels are equally populated. Go beyond—into negative territory—and the distribution inverts.
Temperature, fundamentally, is defined through entropy: 1/T = ∂S/∂E. Usually, adding energy increases entropy (more ways to arrange the system). Temperature is positive.
But in systems with a maximum energy state (bounded energy spectrum), something strange happens. Once you've put most particles in the highest energy level, adding MORE energy actually decreases entropy—there are fewer possible arrangements.
The Key Insight: When ∂S/∂E becomes negative, temperature becomes negative. But 1/T going through zero means T goes through ±∞, not through zero. Negative temperatures are on the "other side" of infinity.
At positive temperatures, the Boltzmann distribution dictates that lower energy states are always more populated. At infinite temperature, all states become equally populated. At negative temperatures, higher energy states are MORE populated than lower ones—a "population inversion."
This is why negative temperature systems are hotter: if you bring them in contact with any positive-temperature system, heat flows FROM the negative-temperature system TO the positive one. Always.
Purcell & Pound achieved negative temperature in lithium fluoride nuclear spins using magnetic field reversal.
Every working laser has a population inversion—more atoms in excited states than ground state. This is a negative temperature condition.
Munich researchers created negative absolute temperature in an ultracold quantum gas of potassium atoms using optical lattices.
If negative temperatures are hotter than infinity, why don't these systems immediately transfer all their energy to everything around them?
The Catch: Negative temperatures can only exist in systems with bounded energy spectra—where there's a maximum possible energy state. Normal matter (gases, liquids, solids) has unbounded kinetic energy and can NEVER reach negative temperature. Only special quantum systems with discrete, bounded energy levels can achieve this.
These systems are also inherently unstable. A population inversion wants to decay back to normal. In lasers, we maintain it through continuous "pumping." In the 2013 experiment, the negative-temperature state lasted only milliseconds.
Negative temperature challenges our intuition about what "hot" and "cold" mean. Temperature isn't really about motion or energy—it's about how eager a system is to give away energy.
A positive-temperature system at +300K has most particles in low-energy states. It can absorb energy. A negative-temperature system has most particles in HIGH-energy states. It desperately wants to shed energy—making it "hotter" in the thermodynamic sense that matters.
Some physicists argue that negative temperatures are artifacts of using Boltzmann's definition of entropy instead of Gibbs'. Under Gibbs' formulation, negative temperatures don't exist. The debate continues in the literature.
Regardless of interpretation, the phenomena are real: population inversions exist, lasers work, and these systems do transfer energy to positive-temperature systems when brought into contact.