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	<title>Science News for Kids &#187; thermodynamics</title>
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		<title>World&#8217;s tiniest fridge</title>
		<link>http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/2010/09/worlds-tiniest-fridge/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/2010/09/worlds-tiniest-fridge/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Sep 2010 20:12:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Stephen Ornes</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Technology & Engineering]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[energy transfer]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Heat]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[physics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thermodynamics]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/?p=6428</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Staying cool, even in the quantum world]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Scientists like to break records: The fastest this, the slowest that;  the most ever seen, the least possible. In fact, much of science may  seem like a quest for the hottest, coldest, closest, farthest, biggest,  or smallest something — or to know how the laws of nature work for the  biggest or smallest things.</p>
<p>But here’s one new record you might not have expected to see: A team  of scientists has come up with a plan for the smallest possible  refrigerator. If it is ever built, it would be much smaller than the  kitchen kinds.</p>
<p>It would be so small, we couldn’t see it — even with ordinary  microscopes. That means it would be useless for cooling things like  chocolate milk and frozen pizzas, but its designers say it may have  other uses — like, say, creating faster computers.</p>
<p>The scientists weren’t thinking about how the mini fridge would be  used. They wanted to know if such tiny objects transfer heat the same  way larger objects, such as refrigerators, do. The area of physics in  which scientists study heat and other types of energy is called  thermodynamics.</p>
<p>Sandu Popescu, Paul Skrzypczyk and Noah Linden are three scientists  who worked on the project. “We believe this is the smallest possible  thing you can call a fridge,” Linden told <em>Science News</em>. All three researchers work at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom.</p>
<p>For objects we can see, like baseballs, physics follows rules. If you  hit the ball, it moves away from you. If you have two baseballs, and  hit one, the other one doesn’t move. If you hit the second one, the  first one doesn’t move. And baseballs certainly don’t talk to each  other.</p>
<p>For the extremely small particles studied in a field of research  called quantum mechanics, nature gets strange. Sometimes, tiny particles  behave as though they’re talking to each other — even if they’re not  close together. If a scientist stops one of the particles and measures  it, for example, the other particle may act like it’s also been stopped  to get measured.</p>
<p>When particles “talk” like this, they’re said to be “correlated.”</p>
<p>The tiny refrigerator works by using three correlated particles.  These particles are called “qubits.” To understand how it works, imagine  you’re playing a game, called “Qubit Refrigerator,” with two friends.  Let’s call them Alice and Sam. The object of the game is to make you  cold.</p>
<p>At the beginning, each of you is wearing a few coats. The game has  three rules: 1. If Alice gets hot, she gives a coat to Sam. 2. If Alice  gives a coat to Sam, you have to give a coat to Sam at the same time. 3.  If Sam gets hot, he throws his extra coats on the floor.</p>
<p>Here’s how it works. Someone (who is not playing the game) starts  giving coats to Alice. Alice puts them on. She keeps getting coats and  putting them on, until she’s hot — and then she starts giving her coats  to Sam. When she gives a coat to Sam, you also have to give a coat to  Sam. Sam gets hot and throws these extra coats on the floor.</p>
<p>Alice is given more coats to wear. The more extra coats Alice is  given, the more she gives to Sam. This means you have to give more coats  to Sam. And as you lose coats, you get colder. The more coats Alice is  given, the more she gives to Sam, and the more you give to Sam — and the  colder you get. The game acts like a machine that makes you colder!</p>
<p>This may be the strangest science game you’ve ever played, but it’s  similar to the a property of thermodynamics that explains how your  refrigerator at home works. Your refrigerator has to be cooler than the  air around it. But usually, heat moves from a warmer place to a cooler  place — so heat should be warming up your refrigerator all the time. But  if you — or your refrigerator — does work on the air outside, it’s  possible to keep the air inside cold. This idea — that you can keep  something cold by doing work — also helps explain the scientists’ tiny  refrigerator. In the case of the “Qubit Refrigerator,” work is done when  someone gives coats to Alice.</p>
<p>Here’s how the game connects to the scientists’ work: Instead of you  and two friends, the “players” in the tiny refrigerator are tiny  particles called qubits. And instead of giving coats, two qubits (you  and Alice) are actually giving heat to the third qubit (Sam). The hotter  Alice gets, the colder you get.</p>
<p>The researchers found that as the hottest qubit (Alice) gets hotter,  the refrigerator gets colder. And as long as the hot qubit stays hot,  this quantum fridge continues to work.</p>
<p>“Once you set it up, it just sits there, gently cooling away,” Linden told <em>Science News</em>.</p>
<p>Right now, the tiny fridge is just an idea, and the scientists have  only devised the device. They haven’t actually built one. “We don’t want  to claim that we know of a place where this happens,” Linden told <em>Science News</em>.</p>
<p><strong>POWER WORDS</strong> (adapted from the Yahoo! Kids Dictionary, NASA Science and Science News for Kids)</p>
<p><strong>qubit</strong> A quantum bit; a unit of information in quantum mechanics.</p>
<p><strong>refrigerator</strong> An appliance for storing substances at a low temperature.</p>
<p><strong>physics</strong> The science of matter and energy and of  interactions between the two, grouped in traditional fields such as  acoustics, optics, mechanics, thermodynamics and electromagnetism, as  well as in modern fields including atomic and nuclear physics,  solid-state physics, particle physics and plasma physics.</p>
<p><strong>particle</strong> A very small piece or part; a tiny portion or speck.</p>
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