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Is it Absolute Zero?

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Hypothetically, if a user’s ice is able to withstand heat that rivals the core of the sun(15 million Degrees Celsius) would that said ice be absolute zero?
 
The problem is that absolute zero is nowhere near as heat resistant as many people think. In fact the reason why absolute zero can't be achieved in labs is because a single ray of light or a speck of dust breaks it by adding a tiny amount of heat. Absolute zero wouldn't last a second against the heat of the sun.

It would be best used as a power feat and a heat resistance feat.
 
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The problem is that absolute zero is nowhere near as heat resistant as many people think. In fact the reason why absolute zero can't be achieved in labs is because a single ray of light or a speck of dust breaks it by adding a tiny amount of heat. Absolute zero wouldn't last a second against the heat of the sun.

It would be best used as a power feat and a heat resistance feat.
Absolute Zero is hypothesized/theorized irl so it wouldn’t even matter. At best, you get near AZ and that is it.
 
It doesn't matter, no negative temperature would survive unless it's continually "fueled", so basically you could keep even a normal block of ice at -1º on the sun as long as the energy of the sun is not reaching it or if you are freezing it as fast or faster than the sun can heat it.
 
The problem is that absolute zero is nowhere near as heat resistant as many people think. In fact the reason why absolute zero can't be achieved in labs is because a single ray of light or a speck of dust breaks it by adding a tiny amount of heat. Absolute zero wouldn't last a second against the heat of the sun.

It would be best used as a power feat and a heat resistance feat.
Also isn’t there an issue with quantum fluctuations as there is energy in a vacuum state?
 
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