Sprinklypoo
Sprinklypoo t1_j5punwl wrote
Reply to Why does hot air cool? by AspGuy25
Barring fans and other means of heat transfer, your answer is flow. Heat flows. The PCB is hot, and the room ambient air is probably around 70F. The casing is heated by the PCB but cooled by the ambient air as the heat flows outward.
This can actually be quite accurately modeled, but I'd probably want a better picture of your solid state system before attempting to do so.
Sprinklypoo t1_j2n50uw wrote
Reply to comment by millenniosaurus in Moab, UT [OC] [3024x4032] by millenniosaurus
I thought it might have been porcupine rim... So those trails overlap?
Sprinklypoo t1_j2dy44d wrote
Maybe the pants are padded too?
Sprinklypoo t1_j18nllj wrote
Reply to Why do we use phase change refrigerants? by samskiter
really simply because all of the heat is contained in that phase change.
For instance, water takes about 100 times the energy to change phase (steam or ice) as it does to raise or lower 1 degree. Refrigerants are similar. You can focus on a specific temperature and provide a fairly solid state process.
Sprinklypoo t1_ixywnuf wrote
Reply to comment by Noahman90 in PsBattle: The Grizzly Bear proof suit by CrysisRequiem
... I like the Tau
Sprinklypoo t1_iu9efu6 wrote
Are cats colorblind?
Sprinklypoo t1_j5pzecj wrote
Reply to If I had two cups of water, one normal size and one as big as a swimming pool and stirred them both with proportionally sized spoons, would the larger pool of water keep spiraling longer than the smaller? by r3volc
Yes. Mostly because of momentum and friction.
Your small cup has a much higher friction at the edges in proportion to the momentum of the circling liquid.
You could of course balance this by stirring the swimming pool at a slower rate - but that wasn't part of your question...