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Caloric theory - Demise | A Wisdom Archive on Caloric theory - Demise |  | Caloric theory - Demise A selection of articles related to Caloric theory - Demise |  |
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Caloric theory, Caloric theory - Demise, Caloric theory - History, Caloric theory - Notes, Caloric theory - Significance in the philosophy of science, Caloric theory - Successes, Caloric theory - Theory
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Caloric theory - Demise | |
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 |  |  | Caloric theory - Demise: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - HistoryIn the history of thermodynamics, the initial explanations of heat were thoroughly confused with explanations of combustion. After J. J. Becher and Georg Ernst Stahl introduced the phlogiston theory of combustion in the 17th century, phlogiston was thought to be the substance of heat.
The calorific theory was introduced by Antoine Lavoisier. Lavoisier had discovered the explanation of combustion in terms of oxygen in the 1770s. In his book Reflexions sur le phlogistique (1783), Lavoisier argued that phlogiston theory was inconsistent with his experimental results, and proposed ca ...
See also:Caloric theory, Caloric theory - History, Caloric theory - Theory, Caloric theory - Successes, Caloric theory - Demise, Caloric theory - Significance in the philosophy of science, Caloric theory - Notes Read more here: » Caloric theory: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - History |
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 |  |  | Caloric theory - Demise: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - TheoryThe theory held that changes in temperature are due to the transfer of an imponderable fluid, invisible and weightless, called caloric.
The theory originally hinged on two key assumptions:
That heat was a 'self-repulsive' (or 'elastic', or 'expansive') substance, while it was attracted to ordinary matter; and
That temperature was the density of caloricSee also:Caloric theory, Caloric theory - History, Caloric theory - Theory, Caloric theory - Successes, Caloric theory - Demise, Caloric theory - Significance in the philosophy of science, Caloric theory - Notes Read more here: » Caloric theory: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - Theory |
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 |  |  | Caloric theory - Demise: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - SuccessesQuite a number of successful explanations can be, and were, made from these hypotheses alone. We can understand why a cup of tea cools at room temperature: caloric is self-repelling, and thus slowly flows from regions dense in caloric (the hot water) to regions less dense in caloric (the cooler air in the room).
We can explain the expansion of air under heat: caloric is absorbed into the molecules of air, which increases its volume. If we say a little more about what happens to caloric during this absorption phenomenon, we can explain the radiation of heat, the state changes of matter under various temperat ...
See also:Caloric theory, Caloric theory - History, Caloric theory - Theory, Caloric theory - Successes, Caloric theory - Demise, Caloric theory - Significance in the philosophy of science, Caloric theory - Notes Read more here: » Caloric theory: Encyclopedia II - Caloric theory - Successes |
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