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/sci/ - Science & Math


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10708819 No.10708819 [Reply] [Original]

If blowing on warm foods cools it, will blowing on cool food warm it?

>> No.10708828

>>10708819
no you have to suck on cold food to make it warm

>> No.10708830

>If blowing on warm foods cools it, will blowing on cool food warm it?
Why don't you try it and find out?

>> No.10708842
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10708842

>>10708830
I was hungry and impatient so I just finished my seafood chowder from the refrigerator cold. Blowing didn't seem as effective as blowing on (say) a hot chocolate. Don't have a measurement for how cold it really was, either. So there we go. n = 1.

>> No.10708918

If you blow hard enough the energy will warm it.

>> No.10708932

>>10708819
How about you blow my dick and see if it warms up?

>> No.10708975

>>10708819
Yes. Everything in the world seeks equilibrium. If you take out an icecream from the firdge and blow on it, it will return to room temperature quicker.

You don't believe it? Put your hand over your mouth and blow on it. You'll feel the heat of the blow.

>> No.10709096
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10709096

>>10708932
Since I don't have problems getting hard, why don't you go put on your stocking and lube up instead, bitch?

>> No.10709140

>>10708819
If it's cold enough, yes.

>> No.10709372

>>10708819
You never tried to blowing on snow?

>> No.10711206

>>10708819
If the air is warmer than the food it will speed the transfer of heat. >>10708975 At work one day when someone was defrosting a mini-fridge with pounds of ice caked on the cold coils, I put a fan to blow on it. They thought I was insane, until the load of ice was gone in 30 minutes instead of 4 hours. Likewise, on any day well above freezing, and for a given temperature, the windier it is the faster snow and ice on the ground will melt. Doubtless weather models take this into account, along with the effect of the change to albedo depending on where snow cover persists.