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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 13:32:37 GMT
So Icefisher opens his fridge door and notices his face feels cold, so he goes the other side of the kitchen and gets his room mate to open the door for him and he notices he still feels cold when the fridge door opens. Icefisher is surprised he feels warmer when the fridge door is closed again. So he gets a radiation thermometer and realises that although the outside of the door is room temperature it is colder in the fridge. But why does his face warm up when the door is closed?
Icefisher struggles with this for a while and reasons there is not a shred of evidence to support what he is experiencing and imagines he has discovered a new source of heating never before known to humans and sets off to the patent office to make his claim.
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Post by acidohm on Jan 29, 2016 15:36:04 GMT
Is it because he just imagines his face warmed up???
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Post by icefisher on Jan 29, 2016 17:53:04 GMT
So Icefisher opens his fridge door and notices his face feels cold, so he goes the other side of the kitchen and gets his room mate to open the door for him and he notices he still feels cold when the fridge door opens. Icefisher is surprised he feels warmer when the fridge door is closed again. So he gets a radiation thermometer and realises that although the outside of the door is room temperature it is colder in the fridge. But why does his face warm up when the door is closed? Icefisher struggles with this for a while and reasons there is not a shred of evidence to support what he is experiencing and realises he has discovered a new source of heating never before known to humans and sets off to the patent office to make his claim. One thing for damned sure Andrew I am not feeling any heat from the backradiation!!!!! You Moron!
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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 18:37:20 GMT
So Icefisher opens his fridge door and notices his face feels cold, so he goes the other side of the kitchen and gets his room mate to open the door for him and he notices he still feels cold when the fridge door opens. Icefisher is surprised he feels warmer when the fridge door is closed again. So he gets a radiation thermometer and realises that although the outside of the door is room temperature it is colder in the fridge. But why does his face warm up when the door is closed? Icefisher struggles with this for a while and reasons there is not a shred of evidence to support what he is experiencing and realises he has discovered a new source of heating never before known to humans and sets off to the patent office to make his claim. One thing for damned sure Andrew I am not feeling any heat from the backradiation!!!!! You Moron! Thats correct. As explained by me about a hundred times, over the course of 4 years, you do not feel any heat from the backradiation.
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Post by sigurdur on Jan 29, 2016 19:49:34 GMT
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Post by icefisher on Jan 29, 2016 21:53:59 GMT
One thing for damned sure Andrew I am not feeling any heat from the backradiation!!!!! You Moron! Thats correct. As explained by me about a hundred times, over the course of 4 years, you do not feel any heat from the backradiation. Dang dude! Then what has all the whoopla been about?
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Post by icefisher on Jan 29, 2016 21:56:32 GMT
Well thats not going to be a very popular theory. I mean can you even tax a volcano?
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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 22:35:36 GMT
Thats correct. As explained by me about a hundred times, over the course of 4 years, you do not feel any heat from the backradiation. Dang dude! Then what has all the whoopla been about? You are unable to produce any understandable comments to let me know why you are objecting to the scientific explanation of why your face becomes warmer when the fridge door is closed.
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Post by icefisher on Jan 29, 2016 22:38:54 GMT
Dang dude! Then what has all the whoopla been about? You are unable to produce any understandable comments to let me know why you are objecting to the scientific explanation of why your face becomes warmer when the fridge door is closed. You just said I would not feel it get warmer. Are you changing the goal posts? It seems all you want to play is infantile games. Lets jump back for a moment and look at that evenly irradiated steel sphere with the steel ball suspended, lets say magnetically in the middle of it, with a lot of glass beads floating around between the steel ball and shell of the sphere. I would think that sphere and all it contents would be the same temperature once given a while to warm up. Yet you believe the steel ball would be cooler than the glass beads. I think its nonsense. I think you have invented some kind MC Escher - like numerological concept that simply is not real.
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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 22:40:15 GMT
You are unable to produce any understandable comments to let me know why you are objecting to the scientific explanation of why your face becomes warmer when the fridge door is closed. You just said I would not feel it get warmer. Are you changing the goal posts? I never change the goal posts. You were talking about heat coming from backradiation.
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Post by sigurdur on Jan 29, 2016 22:49:10 GMT
Remove the source of cold, and of course a temperature would rise to ambient levels. There is nothing about back radiation in the equation.
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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 22:51:53 GMT
Remove the source of cold, and of course a temperature would rise to ambient levels. There is nothing about back radiation in the equation. Can you provide your reasoning please? What do you mean by a source of cold? All objects can relatively be a source of heat unless they are at absolute zero.
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Post by sigurdur on Jan 29, 2016 22:54:33 GMT
You closed the refrigerator door, the source of the cold in the room. Elementary my dear Watson.
When the fridge door was open, the area was consuming warmth. That is assuming that the refrigerator was in a state of refrigeration.
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Post by Andrew on Jan 29, 2016 22:56:50 GMT
You closed the refrigerator door, the source of the cold in the room. Elementary my dear Watson. When the fridge door was open, the area was consuming warmth. That is assuming that the refrigerator was in a state of refrigeration. What do you mean by a source of cold? How does a source of cold consume warmth? Does the cold source exert a force upon the warmth to enable that consumption?
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Post by icefisher on Jan 29, 2016 23:02:44 GMT
You closed the refrigerator door, the source of the cold in the room. Elementary my dear Watson. When the fridge door was open, the area was consuming warmth. That is assuming that the refrigerator was in a state of refrigeration. What do you mean by a source of cold? How does a source of cold consume warmth? Does the cold source exert a force upon the warmth? LOL! Now our local moron is claiming cold air does not absorb anything from hot air! Hang it up Andrew!!!
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