ADIABATIC COOLING

  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

ADIABATIC COOLING

Specialty Definition: Adiabatic process

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

Adiabatic processes are processes in which no heat is gained or lost in the working fluid. The term also describes things that are impermeable to heat transfer; for example, an adiabatic boundary is a boundary that is impermeable to heat transfer. An insulated wall approximates an adiabatic boundary condition. Another example is the adiabatic flame temperature, which is the temperature that would be achieved by a flame in the absence of heat loss to the surroundings. A reversible isentropic process is also an adiabatic process.

Adiabatic heating and cooling are processes that commonly occur due to a change in the pressure of a gas. This can be quantified using the ideal gas law.

There are three different rates of adiabatic cooling for air.

  1. The ambient atmosphere lapse rate, which is the rate that air cools as one goes up in altitude.
  2. The dry adiabatic lapse rate, -10°C per 1000m rise.
  3. The wet adiabatic lapse rate, about -6° per 1000m rise.

The first rate is used to describe the temperature of the surrounding air that the rising air is passing through, and the second and third rates are in reference to a parcel of air that is rising through the atmosphere. The dry adabatic lapse rate applies to air which is below its dew point, ie which is not saturated by water vapor, whereas the wet adabatic lapse rate applies to air which has reached its dew point. Adabatic cooling is a common cause of cloud formation.

Adiabatic cooling does not have to involve a fluid. One technique used to reach very low temperatures (thousandths and even millionths of a degree above absolute zero) is adiabatic demagnetisation, where the change in magnetic field on a magnetic material is used to provide adiabatic cooling.

Adiabatic (perturbation theory)

In perturbation theory, a sufficiently slow change in the Hamiltonian, called an adiabatic change, would result only in a change of eigenvalues, not eigenstates.

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Adiabatic process."

Top     

Crosswords: ADIABATIC COOLING

Specialty definitions using "ADIABATIC COOLING": aerodynamic trail. (references)

Top     

Frequency of Internet Keywords: ADIABATIC COOLING

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

adiabatic cooling

6
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

Top     

Alternative Orthography: ADIABATIC COOLING


Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)

41 44 49 41 42 41 54 49 43      43 4F 4F 4C 49 4E 47

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)

    

Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)

01000001 01000100 01001001 01000001 01000010 01000001 01010100 01001001 01000011 00100000 01000011 01001111 01001111 01001100 01001001 01001110 01000111

HTML Code (1990) (references)

&#65 &#68 &#73 &#65 &#66 &#65 &#84 &#73 &#67 &#32 &#67 &#79 &#79 &#76 &#73 &#78 &#71

ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)

0041 0044 0049 0041 0042 0041 0054 0049 0043      0043 004F 004F 004C 0049 004E 0047

Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)

353843353635544337237494946434841

Top     



INDEX

1. Crosswords
2. Expressions: Internet
3. Orthography
4. Bibliography


  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.