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Description
'... a chill-cabinet of curiosities: hot stuff, and deeply cool ...'
Heat and fire have been at humanity's command for at least 100,000 years, but we've been in control of the cold for barely one hundred. Why it took so long is quite a story. Figuring out the cold would involve some gnomes, a fake perpetual motion machine and a fresh chicken bought in a blizzard.
Where did it get us in the end? First there's the obvious – understanding cold has allowed us to rewrite the rules of food. However, there is much more to it than that. Space rockets, skyscrapers, medical scanners and even party balloons could not exist without the refrigerator. And today, refrigeration is still at the cutting edge as we seek to turn the science fiction of teleportation, immortality and conscious computers into scientific fact.
In Chilled, Tom Jackson delivers the cold hard facts on refrigeration and our battle to keep things cool over the centuries, from the ice houses of ancient Persia to the present day, where a seemingly mundane whirring white box in the kitchen represents one of the genuine wonders of the modern age.
Table of Contents
2 Conjuring Cold
3 Applying Pressure
4 The Temper of the Air
5 Chill and the Airs
6 Going for the Motion
7 An Ice King – or Two
8 Taking the Heat
9 Living in the Chain
10 Deep Cold
11 The Hidden Chill
12 The Future is Cold
Product details
| Published | 01 Oct 2016 |
|---|---|
| Format | Paperback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 272 |
| ISBN | 9781472911445 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Sigma |
| Dimensions | 198 x 129 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Tom Jackson packs an amazing amount of information into this fascinating history of humanity's ongoing quest for refrigeration ... Jackson magnificently shows that science is 'cool.'
Publisher's Weekly
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…a chill-cabinet of curiosities: hot stuff, and deeply cool…
The Spectator
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...a nutritious little book.
Roger Lewis, The Daily Mail
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Without refrigeration, this delightfully illuminating book reminds us, not only would there be no ice cream or cold lager, there would be no MRI scanners in hospitals, no super-computers, no weekly food shop.
The Mail on Sunday
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One of the most entertaining sections of the book concerns the ice wars of 19th-century America where rivals competed to secure supplies...plenty of fascinating stuff.
The Times





















