Off the topic a bit... fanciful...

Regarding the "magnetocaloric effect" as bird-walk launch-point.

Happy Friday!

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If an EM coupling with the Coulombic near-field were established at some conservant resonance, would the  resonant standing-wave-profile afford a thermal-gradient across the resonant structure?

Differently, maybe (and Hi Frank!)...

Would a standing Znidarsic wave in the near-field of copper atomic lattice have a hot peak and a cool valley?

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Let's say it could be so.  In this sci-fi Friday scenario...

If heat were removed from the hot-spot of a standing Znidarsic wave in a near-field lattice, would not the colder strata of the thermal gradient cool down more?

This sci-fi invention is a heat pump.  It is not thermal-difference dependent, but is rather putting a spatial gradient across the black-body energy, per se.

Isn't then this fictional artifact capable of continued operation of thermal-separation into cryogenic temperatures?

Then the fictional marketing department has their turn, and the device is crafted to self-chill to become a superconducting Znidarsic wave which sculpts a giant spherical void in the Earth when it first worked.  Oops.

The lake that filled in was called Lake Znidarsic.


Cheers,

Don


On 9/24/2020 8:05 PM, Jonathan Berry wrote:
I would note that the magnetocaloric effect seems to embody the same effect. Where the order and disorder of the magnetic domains is changed by magnetization, that is erasing data right?!

So it is I guess a pretty robust effect as it is used to cool things already.

On Fri, 25 Sep 2020 at 13:54, Jonathan Berry <jonathanberry3...@gmail.com <mailto:jonathanberry3...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    I'd never heard of that either, but a moment of Googling bought up
    these as the first 2 results:

    
https://physicsworld.com/a/erasing-data-could-keep-quantum-computers-cool/#:~:text=A%20classical%20computer%20generates%20heat,unknown%20information%20in%20a%20system.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landauer%27s_principle

    On Fri, 25 Sep 2020 at 13:35, Terry Blanton <hohlr...@gmail.com
    <mailto:hohlr...@gmail.com>> wrote:



        On Thu, Sep 24, 2020 at 1:21 PM Jones Beene
        <jone...@pacbell.net <mailto:jone...@pacbell.net>> wrote

            Yes, it is long


        It's really not long.  The presentation is the first half hour
        and the last is the Q&A session.  It's all based on the
        Casimir effect.

        I would be interested on more on the claim he made about
        increased heat in computer systems when information is
        deleted.  He acted like that was a proven fact.  Anyone got a
        citation on such?

        TIA

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Stay hydrated!

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