Re: The Carnot efficiency problem
Posted: Fri Aug 04, 2023 6:12 pm
The thing he finds most perplexing I think is represented in this passage, describing the consequence of his new theory of heat that otherwise seems to explain all the new experimental findings:
Clearly, IMO he is seriously questioning the necessity of a "cold body". In the absence of Caloric theory, he says, if this new theory is accepted: "it would be difficult to explain why, in the development of motive power by heat, a cold body is necessary...."
Clearly, IMO he did not consider this old idea derived from Caloric theory of a cold sink being necessary compatible with the new, emerging kinetic theory.
.Heat is then the result of a motion.
Then it is plain that it could be produced by the consumption of motive power, and that it could produce this power.
All the other phenomena composition and de-composition of bodies, passage to the gaseous state, specific heat, equilibrium of heat, its more or less easy transmission, its constancy in experiments with the calorimeter could be explained by this hypothesis.
But it would be difficult to explain why, in the development of motive power by heat, a cold body is necessary ; why, in consuming the heat of a warm body, motion cannot be produced
Clearly, IMO he is seriously questioning the necessity of a "cold body". In the absence of Caloric theory, he says, if this new theory is accepted: "it would be difficult to explain why, in the development of motive power by heat, a cold body is necessary...."
Clearly, IMO he did not consider this old idea derived from Caloric theory of a cold sink being necessary compatible with the new, emerging kinetic theory.