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zakruti.com » Dish recipes » Adam Ragusea
How refrigerators work, and how we all ended up with one

How refrigerators work, and how we all ended up with one

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Rating: 4.0; Vote: 1
How refrigerators work, and how we all ended up with one ubo: I worked on a project, as a student, where adiabatic demagnetisation was used to reach temperatures below 0. 1K in a helium4 sample. I'm ashamed to admit that it never occurred to me that you could use this effect efficiently in a common refrigerator. As a matter of fact I'm still not sure how that would be implemented.
Date: 2020-09-07

Comments and reviews: 9


Mr. Ragusea:
I represent the Hon. Joshua Weissman in regards to this matter. On September 7th 2020, you uploaded a video entitled How refrigerators work, and how we all ended up with one, in which you utilized a shot composition similar in nature to the plaintiff's trademarked Cabinet Shot. This work is derivative in nature, and we demand you cease and desist from placing any and all recording devices inside cabinets, cupboards, refrigerators, or any other food storage devices hereafter. We appreciate your prompt response to this urgent matter.
Regards,
Vinegard Legato, Esq.

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Unrelated question to the video. But have you experimented with the Mac and cheese method where you boil the pasta in milk until it is cooked through and the milk was absorbed industry into the pasta then the cheese was stirred in? If so how did it work for you? And would you have any tips? I've tried making it this way and it went kinda poorly tbh
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We've got to leave a world behind we can be proud of so even our grand grand grand child that will inevitably be controlled by major tech corp lives a life of freedom without having to wear protective fullbodysuits and not being able to go tona forest or beach or mountain.
Preserve the planet.
Peace.

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If this tickles your fancy, Nova had a fascinating 2 part series on the quest for absolute zero, with a lot of history on refrigeration. Also, shoutout the amazing Michael Faraday who is partially responsible for invention of refrigerators.
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Adam: But that's a conversation for another day
Adam: [closes fridge door]
Me: .he closed that fridge door only to open it again a few moments later to retrieve the camera

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Side Note, the basics of these thermodynamic cycles are pretty much pervasive in most modern conveniences, all the way up to jet engines. Qdot, Wdot, and Mdot run the world
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I like how, in one video about refrigerators, I get to learn about history, science, and sociology. Thanks for the video Mr. Ragusea.
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He dropped the magnet thing on us at the end and now I'm gonna do hours of research to figure out if I could safely build one at home.
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This is just a pet peeve of mine, but at 3: 29, anhydrous is pronounced an (without) hydrous (water) where the y sounds like an I.
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