mrSHEiK124
Lifer
- Mar 6, 2004
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Originally posted by: DisgruntledVirus
Originally posted by: mrSHEiK124
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: mrSHEiK124
If I'm getting this right, a proper example would be a room at 72F/whateverC, and a CPU that was running at <72F with only a heatsink? Impossible, it can only be as cool as the surrounding air will allow it to be. It'll transfer heat to the environment until it reaches equilibrium, or as close as the thermal properties of both mediums will allow.
Basically, but assume that the CPU is off. It starts hot, but no additional power is being input.
Still, I think it would never be able to get below ambient temperature. Ignore our concepts of hot/cold, and just look at the heat we're dealing with. It would somehow have to displace its thermal energy away into the environment, which would require some active process (phase change cooling, compressor, whatever).
If I take a massive heatsink that is chilled to sub-zero temps, and use that it will temporarily cool the proc below ambient until it warmed over time and reach equilibrium.
True, but it's not achieving <-than ambient temps "passively," it's because you used something that was <-than ambient to begin with.
