without+heat

  • 11heat exchanger — heat ex·chang·er iks .chānj ər n a device (as in an apparatus for extracorporeal blood circulation) for transferring heat from one fluid to another without allowing them to mix * * * a device placed in an extracorporeal circulation circuit to… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 12heat of vaporization — n. the amount of heat needed to turn one gram of a liquid into a vapor, without a rise in temperature of the liquid …

    English World dictionary

  • 13heat pipe — n. a thin, sealed metal tube that efficiently transfers heat without a pump, using a fluid that vaporizes at the hot end, condenses as it reaches the cooler end, and returns to the hot end by capillary action through a wick or along tiny grooves… …

    English World dictionary

  • 14Heat wave of 2006 derecho series — The heat wave of 2006 derecho series was a series of severe wind events associated with powerful thunderstorms, known as derechos, that occurred in a five day period between July 17 and July 21, 2006. The first storms took place across a wide… …

    Wikipedia

  • 15Heat exchanger — An interchangeable plate heat exchanger Tubular heat exchan …

    Wikipedia

  • 16Heat — In physics, heat, symbolized by Q , is energy transferred from one body or system to another due to a difference in temperature. [cite book|author= Daintith, John |title=Oxford Dictionary of Physics|publisher=Oxford University… …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Heat illness — Calenture redirects here. For the album by The Triffids, see Calenture (album). Heatstroke and Heatstrokes redirect here. For the film, see Heatstroke (film). For the song by Krokus, see Metal Rendez vous. Sunstroke redirects here. For other uses …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Heat engine — Thermodynamics …

    Wikipedia

  • 19Heat capacity — Thermodynamics …

    Wikipedia

  • 20Heat sink — A heat sink (or heatsink) is an environment or object that absorbs and dissipates heat from another object using thermal contact (either direct or radiant). Heat sinks are used in a wide range of applications wherever efficient heat dissipation… …

    Wikipedia