Category Archives: Engineering

Q: Would it be possible to generate power from artificial lightning?

The original question was: Would it be possible to create a very dense cloud cover inside a laboratory under controlled conditions and generate “artificial lightning”?  the Power output would be Amazing!!  it would really help solve our energy crisis. Physicist: … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Physics | 28 Comments

Q: How can planes fly upside-down?

Physicist: The narrative that usually leads to this question is something like: “It was the Wright brother’s brilliant wing shape, among other design innovations, that first made manned flight possible”.  So if the wing shape is so important, why does … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Physics | 21 Comments

Q: What’s that third hole in electrical outlets for?

Physicist: Ground. The zero volt, large-slit wire is called the “return” or “neutral” line.  If it seems strange that the power company would supply you with a wire that has no voltage, keep in mind that what you really need … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering | 9 Comments

Q: Could a simple cup of coffee be heated by a hand held device designed to not only mix but heat the water through friction, and is that more efficient than heating on a stove and then mixing?

Physicist: You could definitely make a device that heats water through mixing.  In fact, that’s exactly how scientists (Joule) figured out how to equate heat energy and kinetic energy in the first place. When you introduce turbulence to a system … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering, Physics | 2 Comments

Q: How does a refrigerator work?

Physicist: “Making cold” is impossible, so a “refrigerator” is really just a heat pump.  Scientists don’t talk about much beyond of a handful of thought experiments.  Quantum physicists: double slit, relativists: trains, thermodynamicists: mirrored boxes and pistons, etc..  Refrigerators can … Continue reading

Posted in -- By the Physicist, Engineering | 4 Comments