Really? I hope you know that 2 Kelvin is -456.07 degrees Fahrenheit...
and... hmmm... I'll check on that then, because now we are looking at it from a realistic perspective, better have our facts straight.
okay, the freezing point of Helium is roughly -4 Kelvin, (-466.87 degrees F.)
however, the amount of energy it would take to WIGGLE it, even slightly, would boil it into plasma.
And to fuse it into Beryllium would produce 5.23 kiloJoules per molecule of heat.
Don't know how much compression it would take.
You..can't get -4 Kelvin.
0 Kelvin is -273 degrees, the lowest possible temperature possible.
Even space isn't that cold.
If you go into negative Kelvin numbers, you end up with negative volume which is physically strange or impossible in this universe.
If you mean 4 kelvin then that is when it turns into a gas.
Under that it is a liquid.
Well in this case, this discussion is closed, because making those assumptions (or stating those facts, depending on whatever and whatnot)
Helium will never freeze, because its not possible to get cold enough.
This thread was not about HELIUM in the first place...
Admin lock this topic, re-direct discussion of my possible faction to the RE-POST thread: Reposted: {HMi}