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A evaporator
Cold packs, for bruises are one invention.
Sort of. In terms of physics, technically there is no such thing as cold. There is only heat, which is than measured on a scale to show how much heat is present. Heat will always transfer to something that has less heat than its present location. So technically no, cold does not absorb heat because cold is a perspective and not something that actually exists.. However, things that have less heat do absorb heat from things with more heat than itself. Cold is an abstract non physics word used to describe things with small amounts of heat, while in reality there is technically at least some measurable amount of heat if compared to true absolute 0 heat.
lose the heat from the refrigerant
conductor
yes the ground takes in heat and cold
Refrigerant
FREON. Freon is now illegal because it damages the Earth's ozone layer. The replacement refrigerant is the inert gas tetrafluoroethane commonly called R134a. Also note that the refrigerator does not"absorb" the heat. It is transferred from inside the compartment to outside the compartment. It does this by the use of two heat exchangers. One transfers the heat from the inside to the refrigerant and the second transfers the heat from the refrigerant to the outside.
The three main functions of the evaporator are to:a. absorb heat from the medium being cooled.b. allow the heat to boil off the liquid refrigerant to a vaporc. allow the heat to superheat the refrigerant vapor
The three main functions of the evaporator are to:a. absorb heat from the medium being cooled.b. allow the heat to boil off the liquid refrigerant to a vaporc. allow the heat to superheat the refrigerant vapor
The three main functions of the evaporator are to:a. absorb heat from the medium being cooled.b. allow the heat to boil off the liquid refrigerant to a vaporc. allow the heat to superheat the refrigerant vapor
The three main functions of the evaporator are to:a. absorb heat from the medium being cooled.b. allow the heat to boil off the liquid refrigerant to a vaporc. allow the heat to superheat the refrigerant vapor
When the weather is cold, the water or refrigerant heats up as it travels through the part of the loop that's buried underground. Once it gets back above ground, the warmed water or refrigerant transfers heat into the building. The water or refrigerant cools down after its heat is transferred.
A evaporator
NO because heat of cooler body is already low it is expected that it will absorb heat
Cold packs, for bruises are one invention.
Sort of. In terms of physics, technically there is no such thing as cold. There is only heat, which is than measured on a scale to show how much heat is present. Heat will always transfer to something that has less heat than its present location. So technically no, cold does not absorb heat because cold is a perspective and not something that actually exists.. However, things that have less heat do absorb heat from things with more heat than itself. Cold is an abstract non physics word used to describe things with small amounts of heat, while in reality there is technically at least some measurable amount of heat if compared to true absolute 0 heat.