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ultrafreddi

Ultrafreddi is an Italian term used to denote conditions of extreme cold beyond ordinary cryogenic temperatures. In English-language discourse, it is sometimes used informally to describe ultracold environments or systems. The term is not part of the official SI nomenclature and has no single, universally adopted definition; its precise meaning depends on context.

In physics and engineering, ultrafreddi conditions typically refer to temperatures well below 10 kelvin, and often

Achieving ultrafreddi involves advanced cryogenics, including dilution refrigerators, adiabatic demagnetization, or pulse-tube coolers, along with careful

In popular science and some research summaries, ultrafreddi is used to convey the scale of cooling challenges

See also: cryogenics, ultracold, millikelvin, quantum computing, superconductivity, Bose-Einstein condensation.

in
the
millikelvin
range,
which
are
necessary
for
phenomena
such
as
superconductivity,
superfluidity,
Bose-Einstein
condensation,
and
certain
quantum
computing
experiments.
Researchers
may
describe
their
apparatus
as
operating
at
ultrafreddi
to
emphasize
the
severity
of
cooling
rather
than
to
assign
a
specific
temperature
threshold.
thermal
isolation
and
radiation
shielding.
Measurement
and
control
at
these
temperatures
require
sensitive
thermometry
and
vibration
damping.
or
the
exotic
behavior
of
matter
at
near-absolute-zero
conditions.
It
is
less
common
in
formal
technical
writing,
where
exact
temperatures
and
methods
are
specified.