Item Upon
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > News and Society > Energy > Energy - How Come We Need More and More?

Tags

  • purify
  • itthe
  • because
  • cleaning water
  • droplets which
  • thinknow energy

  • Links

  • Customer Service ??“ Customers Serving Customers?
  • Yoga Explained
  • Kinder, Gentler Chemotherapy
  • Item Upon - Energy - How Come We Need More and More?

    Beware Of Property Investment Scams!
    Everyone is aware of the benefits of investing in property but as a result of this heightened awareness, more and more scams are appearing that promise to make you a millionaire overnight simply through property investment. We explore one of these scams here.The main scam and the one that most people fall for is the "property investment seminar". This is where you are asked to attend a session that will show you how to make your property fortune. The feel of it will be very high tempo, it will go on for at least 4 hours (without a break) and quite often there is loud, thumping, pulsating music. They tell you that they can help you to get on the property investment ladder with "no deposit" They also tell you t
    ys to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of ene

    Money Does Talk!
    When buying something, you can buy in one of two markets. The first is buying on terms in the retail market and the second is buying in the wholesale cash market. This can be illustrated by referring to the biggest purchase we all make in our lifetime - Real Estate.In recent years, when you are buying a house it is easy to get financing of the first mortgage, so the seller is not forced to finance the whole sale. What I mean is the seller doesn’t become your first mortgage holder, the bank lends the money and the seller get the cash. Moreover, he will most likely make some concessions if he doesn’t have to carry back a second trust deed.Therefore giving the seller all cash, will usually get you a be
    Well, if you have ever been in highschool, you have probably run across a subject called "Physics". And there you have been told that energy can neither be created nor destroyed: Law of conservation of energy.

    So what is it they are all talking about, "source of energy", "energy crisis", "energy conservation" and so on - if you can neither create nor destroy it, how can there be sources and how shortages? How come that energy is conserved under all circumstances and we still constantly need more of it? What happens with the energy once we have used it if we are not annihilating it?

    Easy. Let's look at another vital resource: Water. Yes, it is different. Yes, water can be "made" and "destroyed". But in actual fact, this does not happen on a big scale. So we are nearly right if we say: Water is neither created nor destroyed. Still water can be in short supply, and I am not only talking about the earth's deserts here.

    For instance: With all the people moving to the US West Coast, water supply has become an issue there.

    Now let's ask the same question: What happens to the water once we have used it if we are not annihilating it?

    The answer is quite evident, what do you think?

    You drink something. Even if it is a sugary softdrink of any kind, if it satisfies your thirst, it has to be basically water. And then, where does it go after you drink it?

    Or think of laundry. Fresh water enters the washing machine, cleans the wash, which then is tumbled dry. And the water?

    May be you take a shower once in a while. Clean water leaves the shower head,... well you know the process. Finally it goes down the drain.

    Yes, you got it. Some evaporates (sweating, drying wash), most remains liquid, but is degraded.

    When we use water, we degrade it. So after being used once, it cannot immediately be used again, not even the part we recuperate in liquid form. It has to be processed one way or another. Partly, mother nature takes care of it, lets the sun evaporate it and lets the atmosphere re-condense it to droplets which are clean - at least before they pass through polluted air. We may need to help and do some of the re-processing in sewage plants. Additionally we may have to purify the water after it has been "rain" or "river water". And then we can use it again.

    We are washing stuff with water. Could we clean water with water? I don't know if this is done somewhere, but let's just assume it'd be possible: You have a bathtub full of dirty water. You have found a way to transfer the dirt of the bathtub water to some other water. Would only make sense if the cleaning water which has to receive the dirt is a smaller amount than the bathtubful of dirtwater which you are about to purify. In the end you have less dirt water, but it is dirtier than the bathtub water was because the dirt is now more concentrated. This does not sound like a way we would chose to reprocess "used" water, what do you think?

    Now: Energy? Similar - up to a certain point.

    Just like water, we degrade energy once we use it. And similar to evaporation, some of the energy we use does not end up in the final form we expect it to take on, but rather gets lost on the way converting into some other form.

    But differently from water, we are very limited in our ways to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of ener

    Savings Accounts – Retire In Style
    We all look forward to the day when we can give up work – but to ensure your retirement is comfortable you will need to prepare for it carefully.Putting a proportion of your earnings towards a pension may seem like a drag right now, but realistically you will need to save for as long as possible to gain a decent income in later years. Not only this, but there are substantial benefits to saving into a pension – you’re not taxed on contributions and there may be additional extras such as life insurance or lump sums included in your scheme.These days people are investing more and more in private pension schemes and long term savings – the state pension is likely to become negligible with an ageing national
    destroyed. Still water can be in short supply, and I am not only talking about the earth's deserts here.

    For instance: With all the people moving to the US West Coast, water supply has become an issue there.

    Now let's ask the same question: What happens to the water once we have used it if we are not annihilating it?

    The answer is quite evident, what do you think?

    You drink something. Even if it is a sugary softdrink of any kind, if it satisfies your thirst, it has to be basically water. And then, where does it go after you drink it?

    Or think of laundry. Fresh water enters the washing machine, cleans the wash, which then is tumbled dry. And the water?

    May be you take a shower once in a while. Clean water leaves the shower head,... well you know the process. Finally it goes down the drain.

    Yes, you got it. Some evaporates (sweating, drying wash), most remains liquid, but is degraded.

    When we use water, we degrade it. So after being used once, it cannot immediately be used again, not even the part we recuperate in liquid form. It has to be processed one way or another. Partly, mother nature takes care of it, lets the sun evaporate it and lets the atmosphere re-condense it to droplets which are clean - at least before they pass through polluted air. We may need to help and do some of the re-processing in sewage plants. Additionally we may have to purify the water after it has been "rain" or "river water". And then we can use it again.

    We are washing stuff with water. Could we clean water with water? I don't know if this is done somewhere, but let's just assume it'd be possible: You have a bathtub full of dirty water. You have found a way to transfer the dirt of the bathtub water to some other water. Would only make sense if the cleaning water which has to receive the dirt is a smaller amount than the bathtubful of dirtwater which you are about to purify. In the end you have less dirt water, but it is dirtier than the bathtub water was because the dirt is now more concentrated. This does not sound like a way we would chose to reprocess "used" water, what do you think?

    Now: Energy? Similar - up to a certain point.

    Just like water, we degrade energy once we use it. And similar to evaporation, some of the energy we use does not end up in the final form we expect it to take on, but rather gets lost on the way converting into some other form.

    But differently from water, we are very limited in our ways to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of ene

    Using Direct Mail
    The advantages of using direct mail to promote your home-based or small business are: Selectivity-the ability to send your advertising only to people and organizations who can use and pay for your product or service. Flexibility-the freedom to use either the simplest or the most elaborate presentation, ranging from a single-sheet mailer to an entire package, and the flexibility to test all sorts of minor changes in your mailing pieces. Control-unlike the random placement of a newspaper ad, your mailer stands alone, and you have room to tell the entire story with illustrations, testimonials and guarantees. Knowledge of results-by coding every mailing, you can identify the source of eac
    .

    Yes, you got it. Some evaporates (sweating, drying wash), most remains liquid, but is degraded.

    When we use water, we degrade it. So after being used once, it cannot immediately be used again, not even the part we recuperate in liquid form. It has to be processed one way or another. Partly, mother nature takes care of it, lets the sun evaporate it and lets the atmosphere re-condense it to droplets which are clean - at least before they pass through polluted air. We may need to help and do some of the re-processing in sewage plants. Additionally we may have to purify the water after it has been "rain" or "river water". And then we can use it again.

    We are washing stuff with water. Could we clean water with water? I don't know if this is done somewhere, but let's just assume it'd be possible: You have a bathtub full of dirty water. You have found a way to transfer the dirt of the bathtub water to some other water. Would only make sense if the cleaning water which has to receive the dirt is a smaller amount than the bathtubful of dirtwater which you are about to purify. In the end you have less dirt water, but it is dirtier than the bathtub water was because the dirt is now more concentrated. This does not sound like a way we would chose to reprocess "used" water, what do you think?

    Now: Energy? Similar - up to a certain point.

    Just like water, we degrade energy once we use it. And similar to evaporation, some of the energy we use does not end up in the final form we expect it to take on, but rather gets lost on the way converting into some other form.

    But differently from water, we are very limited in our ways to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of ene

    Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Definition
    Chapter 13 bankruptcy is a method employed by consumers who have debts and are not in a position to pay them back. It is a way for them to restore their financial status and get back to a zero balance.Bankruptcy is a legal process whereby a creditor files for it in a court of law, expressing his inability to pay his debts. Chapter 13 bankruptcy is usually called the reorganization bankruptcy. It is a debt that is filed by consumers who wish to pay their debts within a period of three to five years. It is a strategy that helps individuals to keep some of their possessions such as their homes and at the same time have a means of financially meeting their usual living expenses.A consumer presents a bankrup
    htub full of dirty water. You have found a way to transfer the dirt of the bathtub water to some other water. Would only make sense if the cleaning water which has to receive the dirt is a smaller amount than the bathtubful of dirtwater which you are about to purify. In the end you have less dirt water, but it is dirtier than the bathtub water was because the dirt is now more concentrated. This does not sound like a way we would chose to reprocess "used" water, what do you think?

    Now: Energy? Similar - up to a certain point.

    Just like water, we degrade energy once we use it. And similar to evaporation, some of the energy we use does not end up in the final form we expect it to take on, but rather gets lost on the way converting into some other form.

    But differently from water, we are very limited in our ways to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of ene

    Web Copywriting for International Markets
    So your website is beautifully written, the keywords are all in place and everything seems just fine. But hang on, half or more of potential customers will probably never find you – and many of those that do could find your web copywriting baffling, unappealing or even offensive.How come?Well, it’s not called the World Wide Web for nothing. Like any web, it can act as a trap for the unwary. And a web that stretches all across the world is going to contain a great many linguistic and cultural pitfalls.To start with, there’s really no such thing as Standard English. Standard American English, yes. Standard British English, of course. But for once, Oscar Wilde wasn’t exaggerating when he said that w
    ys to reprocess energy. We can only reprocess energy for another run through our machinery of needs, under condition that we degrade some energy. It is like cleaning dirty water with water. As the dirt has to remain somewhere, no matter how you transfer the dirt to the water-cleaning water, you will always end up with at least some dirty water. Alongside with the cleaned water, you could at best end up with a smaller amount of dirtier water than you had before the treatment started. The dirt is now more concentrated.

    And that's precisely the situation: As a matter of principle, energy can only be "washed" with energy. We have no other "sewage treatment". In the case of water, we have a nice short word for the essence of degradation: Dirt. Unfortunately, we only have a word derived from ancient Greek in the case of energy: Entropy. Very sorry for that. To make things even worse, this type of "dirt" even gets more in any kind of process, so you do not only have to "wash out" entropy from energy to prepare it for re-use, but the very "washing" process produces some more "dirt".

    Heat-pumps are frequently used to "wash" energy. They concentrate heat energy from a level of lower temperature to a level of higher temperature. In our homes, we usually use them only for their cooling capacity in refrigerators and air conditioning appliances.

    So what is the answer to our initial question "how come that energy is conserved under all circumstances and we still constantly need more of it"?

    The answer is: Because we degrade energy in the process of using it as it goes to a state with higher entropy. Unlike water, energy cannot be reprocessed completely because we can only reduce entropy at one place when we increase it at another place, and we have even to accept that the overall entropy increases.

    Still we should try and re-use as much energy as possible, because the entropy production we have to accept along the way is normally smaller than it is when we use "fresh" primary energy, and we are saving our energy resources. Saving primary energy is the key to keeping fuel prices at bay. So we could use heat-pumps not only in air-conditioners and refrigerators, but as well for heating purposes - and run them on renewable energy (wind, solar) as much as possible to cut down on our use of fossil fuels like oil, and to reduce pollution and global atmospheric warming in same time - all without sacrificing our way of life.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.itemupon.com/article/190278/itemupon-Energy--How-Come-We-Need-More-and-More.html">Energy - How Come We Need More and More?</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.itemupon.com/article/190278/itemupon-Energy--How-Come-We-Need-More-and-More.html]Energy - How Come We Need More and More?[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Confidence is the Key to a Great Blog - Earning Friendships and Millions

    Home Equity Loans in California

    Home Equity Loan Refinance - 3 Things to Know Before Refinancing Your Equity Loan

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com