Kassiopeija
Well-Known Member
thats not what the other guy claimed. youre talking evaporative cooling yet he clearly refers to convective gas.That's what I said. Evaporation has a cooling effect. The fan is cooling you because your sweat evaporates.
This is basic physics dude. If you want stable measurements of airtemps you put it in your exhaust.
(Edit: typo)
of course the build up heat gets taken away by the air molecules around it... its called windchill-effect... molecule movement "equalizes" temperature faster. Heat gets transmitted through contact, and then, outta the room.
There are several factors at play, and I have studied them all. That's why I say what I say.
Of course mine is in the exhaust, I kinda argue for it a little here..
A humidifier feels cooling, but does not really cool down anything. Evaporation cools down the surface or air the liquid evaporates from, but heats up the air that it evaporates to. Surface cools down, air heats up. Hence the conservation of energy is not broken.
what about the energy differences when a molecule changes its aggregation status?
Im not sure why youre citing entropy or the therm. laws here as its not a closed physical system anyway...
get an InfraRed-temp-gun. whats really counting for VPD is leaf surface temp. the cheap tempmeters are oftentimes off...Can u explain this to me then.
measure air intake & outtake. then you have 2 (4) reliable data. inside the room the numbers would fluctuate locally so much the data wouldnt be much useful...