1948berg said:
Is the cold weather some sort of energy, or is it the opposite? Could we save the cold and use in the summer (like the old ice cabinets)
Freezing water cracks any pipe no matter how strong it is, it must be energy?
As I said, stupid question when everybody talks about global warming, but I could not help thinking it.
Not stupid at all!
-Energy is "the capacity of a physical system to do work".
-Work is the literal process of transferring energy, or simply put Work=Force x Distance.
-Power is Work/Time.
-Potential Energy=Energy Stored in an object.
-Kinetic Energy=Energy in motion.
-Temperature=Average relative molecular kinetic energy of a substance.
Simply put:
...Weather get's cold (but it's still a heat energy, because it's above "absolute zero") freezes the water (changes it's state), expansion occurs, busts pipe...
So, without making this a text-book, your answer is YES. The term "cold weather" has the "potential" to do all mentioned, in one sense or another, and in my honest opine, would classify as energy.
As for harnessing it and storing for later consumption...if you solve that one, on an efficient scale and you could buy out Bill Gates. Summer's heat for winter, winter's cool air for release in summer.....there's a concept.
Disclaimer: Although I'm not a physics major, (I'm sure there's someone on TBN who is), I did have to take core classes in the subject as a pre-req for my degree.
