In terms of a natural place, it would be Antartica. According to the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (http://www.magnet.fsu.edu/mediacenter/factsheets/numbers.html), the coldest temperature ever recorded on Earth (in nature) was -89°C (-129°F). However, the coldest man-made temperature at the Magnet Lab (in the High B/T Facility at the University of Florida) was -272°C (-459°F). So, the coldest place in the world would be the Magnet Lab at the University of Florida.
...It is in the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory at the University of Florida, where -272 degrees Celsius (-459 degrees Fahrenheit) was created. According to their site, the coldest temperature in nature is -89 degrees Celsius (-129 degrees degrees Fahrenheit) which was reached in Antarctica. Check out their site at: http://www.magnet.fsu.edu/mediacenter/factsheets/numbers.html
...The coldest place on earth is Antarctica. Scientists had found that the temperature in Antarctic region can reach up to -89 degree C or 129 degree F making the the region as the coldest in the world.
The site where the lowest temperature was recorded is Australian Antarctic Territory.
The Bose Einstein condensation was first produced by Eric Cornell and Carl Wieman when they plunged the temperature of 2000 rubidium atoms to a billionth of a degree above absolute zero. This experiment was conducted at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
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