Heat Sinks were in use long before electronic computer. In 1930s radio station power output tube was usually kept cool by a circulating water jacket heat sink.
Since the question is about heat exchange, I assume it is a man made. The first form of heat exchange is cooking. The first fluid is then water.
yes! since a computer is a machine, i.e is using energy for its excutions, during energy cycle heat must be evolved, when fan is introduced then heat effect is reduced.
for the 2010-11 regular season they played the miami heat
Their active components were vacuum tubes (which were large) which generated lots of heat (which needed a large cooling system to remove that heat from the computer).
No, computer heat will not affect anybody.
yes actually NO he invented the computer mouse.
First Generation computers were computers made out of Vaccum Tubes. They were soon rejected due to the extreme heat and electricity absorption.
No they do not the female dog has to be in heat
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There is no difference between a heat thermometer and a regular thermometer. A thermometer measures the average kinetic energy of something, also known as heat. A thermometer's purpose is to measure heat, so a regular thermometer is the exact same thing as a regular thermometer, just with different names.
The CPU (Central Processing Unit) is either a AMD or Intel processor. If you are using a desktop you will be able to locate it on the motherboard. Its under the heat sink/fan on your motherboard. Carefully remove your heat sink and you will find your cpu.
A heat spreader is used to help draw heat from your ram. The average computer user does not need a heat spreader, but someone that has a powerful gaming computer may benefit from using it.