What Is Air Cooling?
Did you know that Air Cooling is the process of lowering air temperature by dissipating heat? It's true! Air cooling occurs when the heat from a source is transferred to a medium, which then disposes of this heat. In the case of your computer, this medium is usually air, but it could also be water or some other liquid. Air cooling works by blowing a stream of air across a surface (fins) or through it (fins). This causes heat transfer between the two materials. The fins are designed to increase this effect by increasing surface area and allowing more air to pass over them. Air cooling can be achieved with fans in many different ways: You can use fans directly by attaching them straight to your CPU (central processing unit), GPU (graphics processing unit), RAM (random-access memory) or HDD (hard drive), or you can use them indirectly by placing another fan between these parts and their respective fans. Air cooling is like a giant, invisible hand always there to help you out. The hand reached in through your open window and grabbed your keys while locking you out of your house. It's the hand that pushed your car out of the way when it was stuck on the tracks because it knew you had somewhere to be. It's the hand that grabbed the light bulb off the lamp and put it back in the socket when you were trying to install new lighting for your kid's bedroom so they'd have better mood lighting for when they were doing homework or reading Harry Potter (the book, not the movie). Air cooling is also like that giant hand because it's always there for us, even when we don't realize how much we need it. You can't see air cooling, but it's still happening all day. It cools our bodies down from the inside out when we've been outside playing sports or running around at recess; it cools down our computers so they can run faster, and it even helps us cook food on those hot summer days when we don't want our burgers getting too dry before we eat them! Air cooling is a great thing!
Related Terms by IT Infrastructure
Join Our Newsletter
Get weekly news, engaging articles, and career tips-all free!
By subscribing to our newsletter, you're cool with our terms and conditions and agree to our Privacy Policy.