• Fuck Lemmy.World
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    2 years ago

    I don’t like this sensationalist title. This looks more like “ventilation” than “air conditioning” to me. It’s easy to draw some blue and red arrows on a picture, but unless that windcatcher reaches several hundreds of meters into the sky where the air is significantly cooler, that wind coming in with a blue arrow isn’t going to be any cooler than the ambient temperature.

    The bit with the qanat may work somewhat like a swamp cooler, as long as you have a continous supply of water that is cool enough for it to work and if the humidity is not too high, but that’s still not air conditioning.

      • @[email protected]
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        92 years ago

        Amazing - I had no idea that anyone was making ice in the desert in BCE times. The wikipedia article seems to indicate that they did a lot of storing of ice in the Yakhchal structures - but it is confusing as to how they made it. It seems like they either gathered the ice from the mountains, or made it in outdoor shaded “ice pools” that were situated next to the Yakhchal. Surely the ice required winter desert temps to form? Otherwise how would the thermal mass of the ground ever get cool enough to allow ice to form, even with the magic of physics? The permanent shading helps, but year round-ice making surely wasn’t a thing, was it?

    • MeanEYE
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      242 years ago

      It’s called evaporative cooling and it’s quite potent since water takes enormous amounts of energy when changing states. It takes around 5x the energy to convert 100°C water into 100°C vapor than it takes to increase temperature of said water from 0 to 100°. This energy has to be taken from somewhere and that is from the environment, dropping the temperature as a result. Problem with these is that the humidity of the air increases. Not much of a problem in desert, quite a bit problem in other places.

      Here’s a great video explaining science behind evaporative coolers and how it can be modernized. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_g4nT4a28U

      Just wind tunnels without water, I agree with you.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      The water doesn’t actually have to be all that cool for swamp coolers, because it’s the evaporation that cools the environment and warm water actually evaporates quicker.

    • hamid
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      2 years ago

      LOL Your comment makes it seem like you don’t think that it couldn’t possibly work, except that these things are still there and you can go visit them right now and feel how cool it is inside the buildings.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Wind powered swamp cooler. Basically a humidifier, but it does lower the temperature. I’ve heard people call swamp coolers air conditioning, so I don’t think it’s wrong.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        No, calling swamp coolers air conditioning is definitely wrong.

        If it’s 100% humidity in your room, the swamp cooler is going to do absolutely nothing, but AC will cool it down and can even dehumidify a bit if you run it enough.

        Swamp coolers are awesome, but they only work in dry climates unfortunately.

    • jerry
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      82 years ago

      No, it’s a swamp cooler, which is still used today in drier climates. This is a desert, so yes the air is not humid, and yes the water is cool because it’s underground. Stop being so pedantic.

      • Fuck Lemmy.World
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        2 years ago

        No, it’s a swamp cooler, which is still used today in drier climates

        So like I said then.

        Stop being so pedantic

        Ah yes, let’s call each other names. Classy.

        • jerry
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          62 years ago

          Pedantic isn’t an insult, my bad. Really felt like you were just nitpicking, sorry.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          On the point of calling eachother names, you two are acting like redditors.

          Now you should really feel insulted.