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Article: <5dsoog$cf@sjx-ixn3.ix.netcom.com> 
From: saquo@ix.netcom.com(Nancy )
Subject: Re: ENERGY WAVES - the Zetas Explain
Date: 12 Feb 1997 15:48:32 GMT
In article <5dp0on$1eq@pollux.cmc.ec.gc.ca> Greg Neill
writes:
> First, the concept of heat as being composed of particles or
a 
> fluid composed of particles was debunked back in 1798 by 
> one Count Benjamin Thomson Rumford. At that time, it was 
> thought that heat was a manifestation of a fluid like
substance 
> called 'caloric' or in some instances, when it was related
to 
> combustion, 'phlogiston'. Caloric supposedly permeated
matter 
> and was responsible for the heat content and temperature, 
> depending upon its concentration. 
>
> What Rumford noticed was that during the process of boring 
> brass cannon barrels, blocks of the metal grew very hot as
the 
> boring tool gouged them out. ... The explanation at the time
> was that 'caloric' was being released from the material as
the 
> metal was being torn up by the boring tool. Rumford noticed 
> that the 'caloric' was released as long as the tool was in
action, 
> and further, through measurement, that the amount of heat 
> released during the process was enough to actually have
melted 
> the block of metal if it were to be 'poured back in'. In
other 
> words, more heat was being removed than could have possibly 
> been contained in the metal to begin with. 
> 
> Rumford's conclusion was that it was in fact the mechanical 
> motion of the boring tool being converted to heat energy, 
> rather than some fluidic or particulate content that was 
> responsible for the heat and temperature, and that heat was 
> in fact a form of motion. Rumford even attempted to
calculate
> just how much heat was produced by a given amount of 
> mechanical engergy. Nancy, you are postulating that
'caloric' 
> particles are contained within matter, and their moving
about 
> is responsible for the physical effects we see as heat and 
> temperature. Rumford's two hundred year old observations are
> just as valid today in refuting your musings as they were in
his 
> own day. 
> ynecgan@cmc.doe.ca (Greg Neill)
(Begin ZetaTalk[TM])
Heat is simply motion, converted? Hahahahahah! Well then if you
think this explanation so magical, explain the heat emanating
from an explosion. Put a match to a gallon of gasoline, and BOOM.
Now, was all that heat and light caused by the motion of the arm
holding the match?
(End ZetaTalk[TM])