https://youtu.be/MHm3fHVZitI?si=mkUIGlaqUUt2NPKs
Furze did it... kinda
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That's an air conditioner. Or a fridge.
You just need to adjust the output and input sizes. Do to like... physics. It is easier to add heat to a system than to remove it.
I present the Macro Wave!
Fridge, well. But now I'm wondering if that would be possible with electromagnetic radiation somehow. Would it be possible to direct infrared waves away from a closed chamber, making the inside cooler? Like a semipermeable membrane in shoes with water vapor?
Yeah there are those machines that like instantly cool your soda can or make ice cream instantly supposedly. They just bathe it in ice and salt water for some time basically
Removing heat energy is what your freezer does, by transferring it outside of the freezer box.
You canβt just remove heat by adding electromagnetic energy. Absorbing energy from the electromagnetic radiation makes heat.
Edit: whelp, TIL
The magnetocaloric effect can do this. Instead of the target absorbing energy, the magnet does. The magnet heats up and the target cools.
I donβt know if itβs a stupid question or not but I have been wondering this myself for years. :)
The reverse microwave. I heard you need a LOT of freon.
Falcoooone
Cold doesn't exist, it is merely the absence of heat. Easier to insert heat than remove it, same reason why you can put on warmer clothes in the winter, but you can't make yourself cold in the summer.