Selasa, 05 April 2016

Recruiting An Emergency Air Conditioning And Replacement Independence MO Contractor

By Candice Hudson


Independence MO, the "Queen City of the Trails, " experiences hot, sweaty conditions during the summer months. Consequently, emergency air conditioning and replacement Independence MO is a way of life. The combined disciplines of heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), depend on the work of a large number of scientists and inventors over centuries of experimentation and discovery.

Among the scientists, engineers, and others who have contributed to HVAC today include: Michael Faraday, Sadi Carnot, James Joule, William Rankine, Nikolay Lvov, Willis Carrier, Reuben Trane, Joseph Black and Lord Kelvin, to name only a few. Here, we explore how how the life of an 18th century Russian poet, architect, geologist, historian, and graphic artist influence how emergency AC repair in Independence MO is carried out.

In addition to being a well-known architect, geographer, and historian, Russian Nikolay Lvov was an accomplished poet. Disgruntled with the low heat output of some of the systems in his time, Lvov came up with a heat exchange method that relied on the use of ductwork. The resulting system was able to ventilate indoor spaces and heat them at the same time. With financial support from outside, he established a training school in order to teach his new methods to local craftsmen.

Lord William Thomson, 1st Baron Kelvin, is the name behind the absolute temperature scale that every science student is taught as a teenager. He is also responsible for formulating the two powerful laws of thermodynamics. A contemporary of British physicist and brewer, James Joule, Kelvin was born in Belfast and went to college at the University of Glasgow.

Joule elucidated the connection between heat and work, what we now call mechanical energy. His First Law describes the interrelationship between current flowing through a resistor and the quantity of heat dispersed. The SI unit for energy, the joule, was named in his honor.

Nicolas Leonard Sadi Carnot is regarded by some as the father of thermodynamics. Born in France in 1796, he was a physicist and military engineer. Carnot's caloric theory of the heat engine was applied by Joule in his own work. Carnot's theory on the maximum efficiency of heat engines was instrumental in helping Lord Kelvin formulate his laws of thermodynamics.

Michael Faraday is credited with discerning the chemical structure of benzene based on a dream. Born in 1791 south of the Thames in Newington Butts, England, Faraday was self-educated. Faraday was also one of the early environmental scientists, and was consulted by the Royal Mint on the subject of pollution.

Those are only a few of the many different individuals who contributed to what we know today as HVAC. Today's Omaha heating and cooling company relies on the dedicated efforts of individuals from France, Russia, England and Ireland from as many as three centuries ago. While your own HVAC engineer need not be expected to spout eloquent Russian poetry, you should be able to rely upon him to turn up promptly, complete the required work without leaving a mess, and providing you with a clear, detailed estimate for the work to be completed.




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