• Self-Evident Violation of the Second Law of Thermodynamics

    From Pentcho Valev@21:1/5 to All on Thu Feb 3 18:23:44 2022
    The second law of thermodynamics: "Heat cannot spontaneously flow from cold regions to hot regions without external work being performed on the system" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_law_of_thermodynamics

    Heat flows from the cold surroundings to the hot water bridge (no external work being performed):

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=U7PeezOzprE

    "The bridge is hot" https://youtu.be/hPM1l93mGZw?t=525

    See more here: https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev

    Pentcho Valev

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  • From Pentcho Valev@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 4 00:28:56 2022
    Water in an electric field automatically becomes a perpetual-motion machine of the second kind. Vigorous motion is generated that can do work (e.g. by rotating waterwheels) at the expense of ambient heat (no other source of usable energy), in violation
    of the second law of thermodynamics:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=17UD1goTFhQ

    An example of "water in an electric field" was published and immediately forgotten in 2002:

    "A deviation from the second law of thermodynamics has been demonstrated experimentally for the first time. [...] To test the idea, the researchers put about 100 latex beads - each 6.3 µm across - into a WATER-FILLED CELL, which was placed on the stage
    of a microscope. The researchers focused a laser onto one of the beads, which induced a dipole moment in the bead and drew it towards the most intense region of the ELECTRIC FIELD in the laser beam." http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2002/jul/16/
    small-systems-defy-second-law

    Nature: "Second law broken. Researchers have shown for the first time that, on the level of thousands of atoms and molecules, fleeting energy increases violate the second law of thermodynamics. [...] They found that over periods of time less than two
    seconds, variations in the random thermal motion of water molecules occasionally gave individual beads a kick. This increased the beads' kinetic energy by a small but significant amount, in apparent violation of the second law." http://www.nature.com/
    news/2002/020722/full/news020722-2.html

    Scientific American: "Second Law of Thermodynamics Violated. [...] ...the water molecules interacted with the bead in such a way that energy was transferred from the liquid to the bead. These additional kicks used the random thermal motion of the water
    to do the work of moving the bead, in effect yielding something for nothing. For periods of movement lasting less than two seconds, the bead was almost as likely to gain energy from the water as it was to add energy to the reservoir, the investigators
    say." https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/second-law-of-thermodynam/

    More here: https://twitter.com/pentcho_valev

    Pentcho Valev

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