![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#81
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
DM wrote: We are talkiing about the rate at which the energy supplied increases the temperature of the room. .... It is not a question as to whether all the energy eventaully ends up as heat- but how long it takes to do so That's not what your previous messages appear to say. For example, you said: "You believe light output all contributes to heat, but again this is incorrect" "Not all light or sound energy will heat up your room" "some of this ends up as heat, but not all" But let's move on and consider the rate. Since virtually all the energy is converted to heat in a fraction of a second, the only question is of how quickly that heat is released into the room. Once steady-state is reached, the heat will be released into the room at the same rate that it's consumed by the TV. So the issue is just how much latency is there in the heating of the room by the TV. This will certainly be a few minutes, mostly while the TV itself heats up, but the same is true if you turn on your central heating - that water and those metal radiators have a substantial heat capacity. If you want to be instantly heated, probably the quickest way is to use a hairdryer. -- Richard -- Please remember to mention me / in tapes you leave behind. |
|
#82
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
DM wrote: If it is absobed then eth ernergy transfer is 1nS saym if it is reflected and absorbed at a later time then the energy transfer is 2ns say. Now in case 1 the power trasfer is doubele case 2. No. The rate of energy transfer is the same, it just starts 1nS later. -- Richard -- Please remember to mention me / in tapes you leave behind. |
|
#83
|
|||
|
|||
|
Richard Tobin wrote:
In article , DM wrote: If it is absobed then eth ernergy transfer is 1nS saym if it is reflected and absorbed at a later time then the energy transfer is 2ns say. Now in case 1 the power trasfer is doubele case 2. No. The rate of energy transfer is the same, it just starts 1nS later. -- Richard Yes the energy transfer is eventully the same, but we need to consider the rate of transfer. That is what will determine how whot it gets within a period of time. In case 1 you supply energy in 1nS, so you add energy , and you also loose some energy during that period. In case 2 you add the same amount of energy to but you do it in 2nS, however during that time you have lost twice as much energy as in case 1. In case 1 the temperature will increase more than in case 2. The energy transfer from you energy source to heat is less efficeint. |
|
#84
|
|||
|
|||
|
Richard Tobin wrote:
In article , DM wrote: We are talkiing about the rate at which the energy supplied increases the temperature of the room. ... It is not a question as to whether all the energy eventaully ends up as heat- but how long it takes to do so That's not what your previous messages appear to say. For example, you said: "You believe light output all contributes to heat, but again this is incorrect" "Not all light or sound energy will heat up your room" If you stand outside a window, you see and hear the TV- the energy has left the building. "some of this ends up as heat, but not all" But let's move on and consider the rate. Since virtually all the energy is converted to heat in a fraction of a second, the only question is of how quickly that heat is released into the room. If all the energy is virtually instantaneously converted to heat how do you get it to do a useful function?. Once steady-state is reached, the heat will be released into the room at the same rate that it's consumed by the TV. So the issue is just how much latency is there in the heating of the room by the TV. This will certainly be a few minutes, mostly while the TV itself heats up, but the same is true if you turn on your central heating - that water and those metal radiators have a substantial heat capacity. Radiators are a good example. How quickly you get that stored energy out as useful heat depends on how you design the radiator. The most important aspect being what the surface area is. AS you reduce surface area you get less transfer from the radiator to the air. But the actual water in the radiator will be hotter than in the case of a more efficeintly designed radiator with a larger surface area. Effectively more of the energy is stored and less going towards heating up the room. The will both consume the same amount of power, but one of them will heat up your room to a higher temerpature. |
|
#85
|
|||
|
|||
|
DM wrote:
Every eletronic element within a TV has mass, all mass when heated up stores that heat as potential energy relative to teh surrounding environment. The heat is stored, and not dissipated efficeintly. No. All the components in the TV will have a heat capacity - that is dictated by the specific heat capacity of the material in question, and the amount you have of it. So for a simple carbon resistor that will be around 700J /kg/K if you ignore its leads for the moment. As a current flows through the resister it will get hotter, so as you say its potential energy will increase and it will be storing a small amount of energy as heat. However the rate of heat loss to its surroundings will also increase since this is dictated by the temperature differential to its surroundings. If the current remains constant, the the power being developed in the resister will also remain constant and the temperature will continue to rise. After a time one of two things could happen. The resistor could over heat and fail open circuit, or more likely, equilibrium will be reached. At this point the rate of heat loss to the surroundings will exactly match the power input to it. When you turn the set off, the resister will then lose its stored heat to the surroundings as well. Hence ultimately all the energy dissipated by the resistor is lost as heat. Ultimately yes - but the issue if power and energy conversion efficeiny So, if you agree that all the energy that you put in will ultimately come out as heat, you would also have to agree that if you stick 1kJ into a TV, the amount of energy released to the room will also be 1kJ. Now efficiency in the case of a heater is defined in terms of the ratio of energy put in to it that is usefully dissipated where you want it. A gas boiler will not be 100% efficient since some of the heat generated will pass out of the flue and not into your central heating. An electric heater however is pretty much 100% efficient (at point of use) - even the voltage drops on its connecting leads will typically result in heat being deposited where you want it. You belive light output all contributes to heat, but again this is incorrect- everything would appear black if this was true. - evidently that is mot so. How do you come to that conclusion? When light strikes an object, some of it is reflected, and some will be absorbed (and this will happen no matter how reflective the surface, since no surface it perfectly reflective). The proportion of the light which is absorbed will result in a rise in temperature of the object absorbing it. Of the reflected light, it will also in turn hit an object where some will be absorbed and some reflected. This will continue to happen until all the light has been absorbed. Now in your closed box, the light will bounce around for few nano seconds - but ultimately it will all be absorbed - how many reflections are sustainable before absorption of all the photons will depend on the reflectivity or the surfaces and the amount of light in the first place. So unless the light keeps on being generated, it gets dark very quickly. Assuming the light stays on, then steady state is also reached very quickly, with all the light being generated, being reabsorbed within a few reflections, but the reflections prevent everything appearing black. Again a simepl matter of time. I think you be confusing yourself by thinking in terms of rate of transfer of energy (i.e. power), when it is the total amount of energy that matters. If it is absobed then eth ernergy transfer is 1nS saym if it is reflected and absorbed at a later time then the energy transfer is 2ns So in both cases, 100% of the energy is absorbed. say. Now in case 1 the power trasfer is doubele case 2. So it is a Say your turn on a light for 1 second in a sealed box. The box is such that it takes 10nS for the first photons to all be absorbed. That means if you plot a graph of the energy absorbed over time, you will see a ramp up starting at time = 0, that will reach maximum at t = 10ns. It will stay at a steady state until you switch the light off, in which case you will see a ramp down that finishes at 1 sec + 10ns. The energy in = energy out, the rate of flow of energy in = rate of flow of energy out once equilibrium is reached. The "storage" of the system (i.e. the flight time of the light prior to absorption) will introduce a delay, but not ultimately have any effect on the total energy radiated and absorbed. more efficeint case to heaqt up the matter. We are talking about the effciency of differnet sources for heat- we can not wait indefiently You seem to be attempting to shift ground a little here. The discussion was whether the TV consuming power at 100W would also be radiating energy to the room at 100W. I take it you now accept that it would once it is warmed up? So in the case of the TV, you may stick 100W into it for 10 hours. 1kWh of energy all told. It may take 15 mins to reach full operating temperature. During which time its apparent dissipation will appear to ramp up from nil to 100W. However after warm up, it will continue dissipating at 100W until you turn it off. At which point it will continue to dissipate at a decaying rate loosing any stored heat energy. Any time delay or lag in response does not change the efficiency, although it lowers the responsiveness. A TV is probably comparable to a normal radiator in terms of response time. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
|
#86
|
|||
|
|||
|
DM wrote:
Richard Tobin wrote: In article , DM wrote: If it is absobed then eth ernergy transfer is 1nS saym if it is reflected and absorbed at a later time then the energy transfer is 2ns say. Now in case 1 the power trasfer is doubele case 2. No. The rate of energy transfer is the same, it just starts 1nS later. -- Richard Yes the energy transfer is eventully the same, but we need to consider the rate of transfer. That is what will determine how whot it gets within a period of time. In case 1 you supply energy in 1nS, so you add energy , and you also loose some energy during that period. In case 2 you add the same amount of energy to but you do it in 2nS, however during that time you have lost twice as much energy as in case 1. In case 1 the temperature will increase more than in case 2. The energy transfer from you energy source to heat is less efficeint. No, just suffering a phase lag. Something every first order[1] system will demonstrate Efficiency is the ratio of energy in vs energy out. [1] i.e. one energy storage component. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
|
#87
|
|||
|
|||
|
DM wrote:
Radiators are a good example. How quickly you get that stored energy out as useful heat depends on how Storage is a misdirection here - remember the radiator is supposed to be transferring energy from the water to the room. you design the radiator. The most important aspect being what the surface area is. AS you reduce surface area you get less transfer from the radiator to the air. But the actual water in the radiator will be So the power output of the radiator falls. hotter than in the case of a more efficeintly designed radiator with a The water entering the rad will be the same temperature as with any other rad. That of it leave will be higher, indicating the rad has dissipated less heat during the transit of the water. larger surface area. Effectively more of the energy is stored and less going towards heating up the room. If you like. The will both consume the same amount of power, but one of them will heat up your room to a higher temerpature. No, this would violate the law of conservation of energy. They most certainly *do not* consume the same power. The rad with lower output will consume less and emit less. If you room was lossless, then either could heat it to the same temperature (i.e. that of the water). If the room has losses, then both will heat it to a steady state, but the rad with the higher power output will be able to get closest to the water temperature. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
|
#88
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Richard Tobin" wrote in message ... In article , If you want to be instantly heated, probably the quickest way is to use a hairdryer. No, climb into the microwave. Bill |
|
#89
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
DM wrote: Since virtually all the energy is converted to heat in a fraction of a second, the only question is of how quickly that heat is released into the room. If all the energy is virtually instantaneously converted to heat how do you get it to do a useful function?. I didn't say "virtually instantaneously", I said "in a fraction of a second". It does all its useful functions within that fraction of a second. The light leaves the TV screen, reaches your eyes a few nanoseconds later (the speed of light is one foot per nanosecond), and is absorbed. The sound leaves the speaker, reaches your ears a few milliseconds later (the speed of sound is about one foot per millisecond), and is absorbed. Very tiny amounts will last longer: some light might go out of the window and if it's a clear night reach Alpha Centauri four years later. Some of the sound might persist for thousands of feet. But these are completely insignificant. Once again, if you believe that an appreciable amount of energy remains in non-heat forms for more than a fraction of a second, tell us what that form is. (Actually, I can think of another form, but it's again just a latency issue, and is again negligible: some energy is stored as an electric field in capacitors in the TV. They won't affect the heat output after the first few seconds at most.) -- Richard -- Please remember to mention me / in tapes you leave behind. |
|
#90
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
Bill Wright wrote: In article , If you want to be instantly heated, probably the quickest way is to use a hairdryer. No, climb into the microwave. I was going to say that, but I thought there might be small children reading. -- Richard -- Please remember to mention me / in tapes you leave behind. |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| OEM TV remotes for sale cheap $2.50-$8 | Steve Kral | High definition TV | 1 | July 14th 08 11:24 PM |
| video supermarket !good quality and cheap price!brand new, and factory sale | [email protected] | UK digital tv | 0 | August 23rd 07 08:40 AM |
| * Warning * For anyone using Auction world Television * Warning * | Marky | UK sky | 16 | October 12th 04 06:01 PM |