lamont
Contributor
bluesbro1982:1 kelvin is defined as 1/273.16 of the triple point of water. one could define it as 1/whatever the triple point of any other element is and get the same thing to measure absolute 0, but the temperature scale (how much energy is in one "degree") would be different.
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/kelvin.html
Any measurement we make is "relative" to something. Hell, even the kilogram is still defined as "the weight of the standard," which is the platinum-iridium cylinder at the standards office.
Also consider the fact that we define the speed of light "per second," which is defined as:
The duration of 9 192 631 770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium 133 atom.
Relative to the cesium atom is an arbitrary choice based on its stability / availability / whatever. What is an absolute scale?
And if the speed of light is not actually a universal constant and has changed over time and is currently varying that would change the EM spectra of cesium-133 slightly and change the frequency with which it transitions between those two levels, so that may not be absolute. Even without considering that, though, cesium clocks at different depths in a gravitational well or different space-time curvature will tick differently and disagree (which leads to the General Relativity corrections to GPS time since satellite atomic time drifts from atomic time at the Earth's surface).
Everything we measure needs to be with respect to some reference standard, and that reference standard is just an experiment which can be done by any scientists which agrees to a very high degree universally. So everything is relative to the characteristics of some physical phenominon like the triple point of water or the transition frequency of the hyperfine levels of cesium-133. Those standards both benefit from being precise and repeatable to a very high degree. The historical Farenheit scale is less precise and less repeatable because it was developed at a much earlier time and now it is defined and derived from the triple point of water instead of the experiments which initially defined it in order to give it the same precision.