Thermal stability originates the vanishing of the specific heats at the absolute zero
Abstract
The relationship between the vanishing of the heat capacities as T0+ and the thermal stability is examined. The heat capacities vanish as fast as or faster than T as T0+ for states at the phase space boundary (T=0) to sustain the standard thermal stability criterion Uss>0. Conversely, weakly vanishing heat capacities, which signify a loss of curvature in U(S) at T=0, are the signature of a critical condition precisely at T=0, as exemplified in marginal Fermi liquids. Therefore, the vanishing of the specific heat should be viewed not as a new law but as a confirmatory result of the existing framework of thermodynamics.
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