Submitted by samskiter t3_zsiyxn in askscience
LionSuneater t1_j18yo9l wrote
Reply to comment by seven_tech in Why do we use phase change refrigerants? by samskiter
Latent heat of fusion is a pretty common term in the US. I use it in our physics department and nobody bats an eye.
seven_tech t1_j1apyhr wrote
Yes, I've had this argument several times.
We don't use that term in Australia. Because it's ambiguous. Fusion (more specifically nuclear fusion) is a specific physical process and its use in science is replacing fusion as in 'melting', which is a term dating back several hundred years. So we use melting now, because it's unambiguous otherwise.
You could argue, and many people would still agree, gay means happy. Yet you also wouldn't be unsurprised if people thought they were homosexual if you said 'I thought he was very gay' and many young people would never have heard gay used in any other context. Language changes and it's ambiguous. And science when speaking of fusion, doesn't like ambiguity.
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