Temperature ? What happens to be it?

Temperature ? a term that we use daily as a matter needless to say, without being made alert to the physical correlations. But how is the term temperature defined?
Everybody perceives temperature within their environment purely subjectively. If we are too warm or too cold, it is a feeling, which might be different from individual to individual ? because Highest gets cold at exactly the same speed. The word temperature ? or, better, the condition, that influences (among other things) our mind-set ? is discussed daily whenever we are discussing the expected temperature from the weather forecast with friends, acquaintances or colleagues.
Temperature
With the term temperature (from the Greek ?thermis? = warm), a particular thermal state of a body is described. Heat is really a measure of the power of a body, which is generated by the random motion of its atoms or molecules in the body?s interior. Here, the temperature is the magnitude of a state which establishes the energy content connected with other physical quantities (mass, heat capacity).
Temperature unit
The machine of temperature may be the Kelvin. At a temperature of 0 K, all atoms or molecules inside a body are in rest ? all motion in the body is frozen. One describes this state as the absolute zero point. The Celsius temperature scale that is more common in our latitudes defines the zero point as the freezing point of water, since this problem could be reproduced without great technical effort in past times.
Temperature measurement
Different physical properties are directly dependent on the temperature and therefore are employed for temperature measurement, such as, for example:
the dependence of expansion on temperature
the change in electrical resistance with temperature
voltage generation according to the temperature
temperature-dependent frequency fluctuations
changes in the wavelength of rays of a body, with regards to the temperature
Note
Information on our temperature measuring instruments are available on the WIKA Website.

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