In 1986, a second reservoir was prepared for initial hydraulic circulation and heat extraction testing.
2.
Heat gains, heat extraction rate, and cooling loads values are often not equal due to thermal inertia effects.
3.
Often, for protection and heat extraction reasons during the cooling period, solar shading devices are placed inside the cavity.
4.
Furthermore, heat extraction rate is the rate at which heat is actually being removed from the space by the cooling equipment.
5.
Geothermal power is considered to be a renewable source of energy because the heat extraction is small compared with the Earth's heat content.
6.
There are specially designed heat pumps that, while giving up some performance in cooling mode, will provide useful heat extraction to even lower outdoor temperatures.
7.
It has been found as a volatile component in pineapples and Beaufort cheese and is a secondary component in vanilla flavor obtained from heat extraction of vanilla in amounts of up to 1 ppm.
8.
ARC Energy developed a sapphire crystal c-axis growth technology specifically for LED applications, called CHES ( Controlled Heat Extraction System ) . CHES Furnaces enable substrate manufacturers to produce large diameter ( 4, 6, 8, 10 and larger ), LED-quality sapphire for mass production.
9.
:: : Don't forget the short assay ton, the long assay ton ( both of which are different for US and UK and are some small number of grams ), the register ton ( 100 cubic feet ), the shipping or freight ton ( 40 cubic feet ) and the displacement ton ( 35 cubic feet ), the water ton ( 224 british gallons ), the ton force, the oil ton ( 10 10 international table calories ) and the coal ton ( 7x10 9 ) international table calories ), the refrigeration ton ( rate of heat extraction required to turn one ton of water into ice ), the tnt-ton, the tun ( irish, british or US tuns are all different ), or the roman ton, the deadweight ton, the dry ton, the harbor ton, the shortweight and longweight tons ( not the same as short and long tons ), the gross and net tons . . . < sigh>