Cryogenics Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cryogenics stocks.

Cryogenics Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 APD Air Products and Chemicals declares $1.77 dividend
Nov 21 APD Air Products Declares Quarterly Dividend
Nov 21 APD Like Passive Income? Then You'll Love These 3 Dividend Stocks.
Nov 20 TMO End Market Growth, New Acquisitions Drive Thermo Fisher's Shares
Nov 20 GTLS Pulsar Helium Agrees With NYSE's Chart Industries for Helium, CO2 Capture and Production
Nov 20 GTLS Pulsar Helium Signs Agreement With Chart Industries for Helium and CO2 Capture And Production
Nov 19 APD Mantle Ridge Nominates Slate of Directors at Air Products
Nov 19 APD Air Products Issues Statement
Nov 19 TMO Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. (TMO) Wolfe 2024 Healthcare Conference (Transcript)
Nov 19 APD Market Chatter: Air Products and Chemicals Faces Board Challenge as Mantle Ridge Pushes for Change
Nov 19 APD Mantle Ridge confirms nominations for Air Products board; seeks CEO ouster
Nov 19 APD Exclusive-Mantle Ridge nominates new board for Air Products, pushes for new CEO
Nov 19 TMO The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Thermo Fisher Scientific, NextEra Energy and Lowe's
Nov 18 TMO Top Analyst Reports for Thermo Fisher, NextEra Energy & Lowe's
Nov 18 APD There Are Some Holes In Air Products and Chemicals' (NYSE:APD) Solid Earnings Release
Nov 18 APD Air Products nominates two for board following activist investor pressure
Nov 18 APD Do Options Traders Know Something About Air Products (APD) Stock We Don't?
Nov 18 APD Air Products And Chemicals: 2 Strategies For A Dividend Champion (Technical Analysis)
Nov 18 TMO Is Thermo Fisher Scientific (NYSE:TMO) A Risky Investment?
Nov 18 APD Air Products Announces Two New Independent Director Candidates as Part of Ongoing Board Refreshment
Cryogenics

In physics, cryogenics is the production and behaviour of materials at very low temperatures. A person who studies elements that have been subjected to extremely cold temperatures is called a cryogenicist.
It is not well-defined at what point on the temperature scale refrigeration ends and cryogenics begins, but scientists assume a gas to be cryogenic if it can be liquefied at or below −150 °C (123 K; −238 °F). The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology has chosen to consider the field of cryogenics as that involving temperatures below −180 °C (93 K; −292 °F). This is a logical dividing line, since the normal boiling points of the so-called permanent gases (such as helium, hydrogen, neon, nitrogen, oxygen, and normal air) lie below −180 °C while the Freon refrigerants, hydrocarbons, and other common refrigerants have boiling points above −180 °C.Discovery of superconducting materials with critical temperatures significantly above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen has provided new interest in reliable, low cost methods of producing high temperature cryogenic refrigeration. The term "high temperature cryogenic" describes temperatures ranging from above the boiling point of liquid nitrogen, −195.79 °C (77.36 K; −320.42 °F), up to −50 °C (223 K; −58 °F), the generally defined upper limit of study referred to as cryogenics.Cryogenicists use the Kelvin or Rankine temperature scale, both of which measure from absolute zero, rather than more usual scales such as Celsius or Fahrenheit, with their zeroes at arbitrary temperatures.

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