So when the liquid
phase change refrigerant is chugging heat past the tropopause and indeed CREATING the tropopause indirectly — CO2 that gets left aloft sort of rides on the top of the lower troposphere after water vapor carries it up repeatedly in convective lift --
The liquid condensed at the bottom evaporates creating local cooling and rises; the way ocean water and all water does from the surface as an enormous pool of evaporative
phase change refrigerant for the surface (and the atmospheric bath of nitrogen / oxygen).
No — we wouldn't expect just whatever some endlessly busted bunch of pseudo scientific quacks say, to define the thermodynamics of a warm rock, being scrubbed by frigid winds, immersed in freezing cold
phase change refrigerant.
Not exact matches
A
refrigerant is a compound used in a heat cycle that undergoes a
phase change from a gas to a liquid and back.