no
To sink the heat.
No, they are differently shaped, different sizes and density. It also depends on the board and whether or not you have non factory heat sink specs installed.
A heat sink works on the principle of thermal transfer. The heat sink transfers heat from the chip to the air, wicking heat away.
Yes! Water is a heat sink.
Probably because it draws/absorbs the heat making the heat "sink" into it
Heat sinks increase the rate of heat loss from the source into the environment, i.e. usually air. The heat goes to the same place as it would without the heat sink, it just does it quicker. Some heat sinks may be enclosed in a liquid, which is used to transport the heat elsewhere where it cools down and then returns.
heat sink is when heat is absorbed into any type of environment, including the aquatic ecosystem; and carbon sink is when CO2 is absorbed into any type of environment including the terrestrial ecosystem.
If you change the processor to one that generates more heat than the sink can dissipate you will need to put a larger sink in your computer, but if the processor is the same and you haven't overclocked or anything, the sink will last forever. It's made from cast aluminum and just sits there. It won't wear out.
The same thing the old heatsink did. distrabute the heat away from the CPU and GPU to help avoid overheatind
makes the heat sink
electric component
heat sink fine+laptop won't power on