Cooling things down

C

cantaloup63

Someone explain this to me. In ancient Egypt, they used to fill containers placed on the top of buildings with boiling water, which used to cool the building down :confused:

How does that work? :confused:
 
Sponsored Links
When a liquid vaporizes rapidly, it expands quickly. The rising molecules of vapor abruptly increase their kinetic energy and this increase is drawn from the immediate surroundings of the vapor. These surroundings are therefore cooled.
 
Sponsored Links
When a liquid vaporizes rapidly, it expands quickly. The rising molecules of vapor abruptly increase their kinetic energy and this increase is drawn from the immediate surroundings of the vapor. These surroundings are therefore cooled.

That's describing something like an unvented cylinder exploding, where the pressurised water is suddenly released and flashes to steam, increasing it's volume by 1600 times.
It's not relevant to a tub of boiling water being left to cool.
 
When a liquid vaporizes rapidly, it expands quickly. The rising molecules of vapor abruptly increase their kinetic energy and this increase is drawn from the immediate surroundings of the vapor. These surroundings are therefore cooled.
One would have thought that this would apply to the pots and not the building. But hey ho, maybe it worked.
 
Apparently , there has never been found a single heiroglyph that depicts the building of the Pyramids. This from a race of people who's very existance and daily lives have been depicted in heiroglyphs since they could hold a tool !
 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top