So, I've been reading stuff online trying to understand how a heat pump works. My apartment is heated and cooled with a heat pump. How does the heat pump pull 70-degree heat out of the 40-degree cold outside air? I'm not stupid, but nothing I've read makes any sense.
second law of thermodynamics
by Hortensia 2 Replies latest jw friends
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prologos
IF YOU USED THE KELVIN SCALE YOU WOULD SEE IT PERHAPS.
ANYTHING ABOVE O (ZERO) KELVIN OR 265 CEENTRIGRADE HAS ENERGY, HEAT, MOVEMENT THAT CAN BE CAPTURED AND STORED AND USED TO HEAT A COOLER AREA.
YOUR REFRIGIRATOR HEATS YOUR HOUSE, COOLES ITS CONTENT. YOUR HEATPUMP COOLS THE GREAT OUTDOORS IN THE WINTER EVEN MORE, TO HEAT YOUR HOUSE,
IN THE SUMMER IT WORKS LIKE YOUR FRIDGE, IT HEATS THE OUTDOORS EVEN MORE.
CALL IT AN ENERGY PUMP.
THEY ALSO BREAK DOWN, SO DO WE. AND PERHAPS NOT BECAUSE OF THE TALKING SNAKE.
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Hortensia
YOUR REFRIGIRATOR HEATS YOUR HOUSE, COOLES ITS CONTENT.
I see it! The stuff I read kept saying it's like a refrigerator, but you said how it's like a refrigerator. At the moment I think I have a grasp of it.