
Originally Posted by
Tom Mazanec
Assume a Clarkean technology ("indistinguishable from magic") that cools matter by converting the thermal energy of the atoms into a 50-50 mixture of neutrinoes and anti-neutrinoes. What temperature could you get a sample of matter down to until the thermal energy of an atom would be too small to make up the mass of {neutrino + anti-neutrino} (I assume it would be different for different elements)?
Also, while I do not have a shadow of a ghost of a clue how to actually make such a cooler, is there any fundamental reason why it would be impossible?