A/C Came Standard On Some Armored Dinosaur Models 34
An anonymous reader writes In a new study, paleontologists revealed that armor–plated Ankylosaurs had an exceptional capability to change the temperature of the air they breathed with the help of their long, winding nasal passages. From the article: "Led by paleontologist Jason Bourke, a team of scientists at Ohio University used CT scans to document the anatomy of nasal passages in two different ankylosaur species. The team then modeled airflow through 3D reconstructions of these tubes. Bourke found that the convoluted passageways would have given the inhaled air more time and more surface area to warm up to body temperature by drawing heat away from nearby blood vessels. As a result, the blood would be cooled, and shunted to the brain to keep its temperature stable."
Love your nose (Score:2)
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how do we know for sure that these features part of their HOST for explicitly this reason -- it could have acted as a FILTER for pathogens?
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we got nothing on aquatic animals. they got counter current exchange going.
That's not how air conditioning works (Score:1)
Just sayin'
It's not how YOUR air conditioning works... (Score:2)
Refrigeration is only one of numerous ways to do air conditioning. The important thing is modifying the air's properties (temperature and/or humidity) to better suit a target application.
In this case, the dinosaur had a sophisticated heat exchanger, one key component of air conditioning. But the "air conditioning" (warming the air) isn't the function they're emphasizing -- they're emphasizing the "chiller" function, where that air controllably cooled blood circulating to the brain.
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A/C, at least in the US, refers specifically to refrigeration. Otherwise it's called ventilation. Hence HVAC, or Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning. It is a novel heat exchanger, at least in the animal world where turbinates are the norm. Using the proper term in scientific literature matters, otherwise it's just another rock hard abs, bigger boobs, or amazing cat story linked from a social media aggregator.
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I googled "passive air conditioning" and got about 7,770,000 results. A quick browse of links showed no instances of using the refrigeration cycle. I guess A/C without refrigeration is a thing.
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What, you're saying swamp coolers [wikipedia.org] don't qualify as A/C? They may not use the traditional compression/expansion cycle, but they certainly do cool an area. And a mucosal surface like the nasal cavity would provide plenty of evaporation to further expel heat from the body. (Although I suspect that the dinosaurs in TFA used swamp cooling primarily in its most literal sense of "hey, let's stand in the swamp because it's cooler".)
The study postulates that dinosaurs' nasal cavities acted as heat exchangers. Wit
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No, they're not actually. Traditionally, "air-conditioning" requires a transfer of energy against the normal entropic flow. Evaporative (aka "Swamp") coolers trade latent heat for sensible heat, increasing the humidity of a space in proportion to the energy lost in the air stream.
I would have no problem characterizing the process as a heat exchanger - a somewhat unusual version, even. Calling it A/C is part of the dumbing down of the entire internet.
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Yep, this is an intercooler, not AC.
The A/C option makes sense (Score:1)
After all, it also came with the alligator-skin seats and the stadium seating...
Impractical. (Score:2)
The cords would just keep getting tangled up. You're much better off getting the DC model with a big battery pack.
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Better than D/C (Score:2)
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What type of outlet did they plug into? American? European?
African, likely
European outlets wouldn't be able to carry enough weight, unless perhaps you had two of them with a string between them
this does nothing (Score:1)
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Well, I guess you'd better call paleontologist Jason Bourke and his team of scientists at Ohio University and tell them what a bunch of idiots they are.
Let's say the air outside is 100F and your blood is 98F so you want to cool down.
It was really hot yesterday. I put a sweater on. I got even hotter! Therefore sweaters are always useless.
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Is it more likely that the article, which is a summary, and the summary, which is a summary of a summary, elided over important bits? Or that you are an idiot?
Is it possible that warmer blood was redirected to the brain, and cooler blood elsewhere, yielding, in idiot terms, "nothing", but in pseudo-science terms "preservation of a favored organ"?
Is it possible at all, that an overheated arm is of little concern, but an overheated brain might be a little more important?
I apologise, science is obviously wron
Climate Change (Score:2)
No wonder the dinosaurs went extinct! Running the A/C all the time, they caused so much climate change that they wiped themselves out!
Not A/C (Score:3, Insightful)
If it doesn't feature the Carnot cycle, it isn't actually A/C, IMO.
This is not that unusual (Score:2)