I tried to think of a better word than 'condense', but maybe I didn't think long enough.eccentrically1 wrote:If, yes.jim wrote:If you have a way of separating, sorting, or manipulating kinetic motion so as to condense it from one material into another material, then you have increased the amount of usable energy without increasing the total energy. Such a process would not break any of the previously mentioned laws. One must understand the limits of each of these laws.
Manipulating kinetic energy condenses it? What does that mean? Isn't condensing something making it smaller, more dense? Change gas to liquid?
If besslers wheel did what i summarised in my last post, and if we can believe what he wrote, then that would be a good example.
Can you think of any other examples?
What poetic descriptive word might be used to describe transferring kinetic energy from one weight into another weight? One weight looses a large portion of its kinetic motion energy. The other weight gains said kinetic motion energy.
If you take tomato juice out of one can and squish/compress it into another already full can of juice, so that the second can hold almost twice as much juice (and become tomato paste), then 'condensing' seems like an appropriate word. Maybe I should have said 'compress' or 'squeeze' or 'add' or 'transfer'.
Yes, condensing makes things more dense. But if the container was full before adding more, then it doesn't get smaller, is simply gets denser.
If you take the heat from one side of a vessel (Maxwell's Demon) and move it to the other side of the vessel, you haven't made the warmer side smaller, but you have condensed the heat from the cooler side to the warmer side. The warmer side then has more heat, but has not changed volume.