Dictionary Definition
caloric adj
1 relating to or associated with heat; "thermal
movements of molecules"; "thermal capacity"; "thermic energy"; "the
caloric effect of sunlight" [syn: thermal, thermic] [ant: nonthermal]
2 of or relating to calories in food; "comparison
of foods on a caloric basis"; "the caloric content of foods"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
caloricNoun
caloric- the hypothetical medium of heat
Related terms
- calorific (UK)
- calorific value
Extensive Definition
The caloric theory is an obsolete
scientific theory that heat consists of a fluid called
caloric that flows from hotter to colder bodies. Caloric was also
thought of as a weightless gas that could pass in and out of pores
in solids and liquids. The "caloric theory" was superseded by the
mid-19th century in favor of the theory of
heat but nevertheless persisted in scientific literature until
the end of the 19th century.
Early history
In the history of thermodynamics, the initial explanations of heat were thoroughly confused with explanations of combustion. After J. J. Becher and Georg Ernst Stahl introduced the phlogiston theory of combustion in the 17th century, phlogiston was thought to be the substance of heat.The caloric theory was introduced by Antoine
Lavoisier. Lavoisier had discovered the explanation of
combustion in terms of oxygen in the 1770s. In his paper
"Réflexions sur le phlogistique" (1783), Lavoisier
argued that phlogiston theory was inconsistent with his
experimental results, and proposed a 'subtle fluid' called caloric
as the substance of heat. According to this theory, the quantity of
this substance is constant throughout the universe, and it flows
from warmer to colder bodies.
In the 1780s, some believed
that cold was a fluid, "frigoric". Pierre
Prévost argued that cold was simply a lack of caloric.
Since heat was a material substance in caloric
theory, and therefore could neither be created nor destroyed,
conservation
of heat was a central assumption.
The introduction of the Caloric theory was also
influenced by the experiments of Joseph Black
related to the thermal properties of materials. Besides the caloric
theory, another theory existed in the late eighteenth century that
could explain the phenomena of heat: the kinetic
theory. The two theories were considered to be equivalent at
the time, but caloric theory was the more modern one, as it used a
few ideas from atomic theory and could explain both combustion and
calorimetry.
Successes
Quite a number of successful explanations can be, and were, made from these hypotheses alone. We can understand why a cup of tea cools at room temperature: caloric is self-repelling, and thus slowly flows from regions dense in caloric (the hot water) to regions less dense in caloric (the cooler air in the room).We can explain the expansion of air under heat:
caloric is absorbed into the molecules of air, which
increases its volume. If
we say a little more about what happens to caloric during this
absorption phenomenon, we can explain the radiation
of heat, the state
changes of matter under various temperatures, and deduce nearly
all of the gas laws.
Sadi Carnot developed his principle of the Carnot
cycle, which still forms the basis of heat engine
theory, solely from the caloric viewpoint.
However, one of the greatest confirmations of the
caloric theory was Pierre-Simon
Laplace's theoretical correction of Sir Isaac
Newton’s pulse equation. Laplace, a calorist, added a constant
to Newton’s equation, which we refer to today as the adiabatic
index of a gas. This
addition not only substantially corrected the theoretical
prediction of the speed of
sound, but also continued to make even more accurate
predictions for almost a century afterward, even as measurements of
the index became more precise.
The study of crystals in modern solid-state
physics reflects a shadow of the abandoned caloric theory.
Lattice
vibrations of crystals, which carry thermal energy, are
quantized, and
consequently have wave-particle
duality. The particle representation of a lattice vibration is
called a phonon, by
analogy with the photon.
Later developments
In 1798, Count Rumford published An Experimental Enquiry Concerning the Source of the Heat which is Excited by Friction, a report on his investigation of the heat produced while manufacturing cannons. He had found that boring a cannon repeatedly does not result in a loss of its ability to produce heat, and therefore no loss of caloric. This suggested that caloric could not be a conserved "substance" though the experimental uncertainties in his experiment were widely debated.His results were not seen as a "threat" to
caloric theory at the time, as this theory was considered to be
equivalent to the alternative kinetic
theory. In fact, to some of his contemporaries, the results
added to the understanding of caloric theory.
Rumford's experiment inspired the work of
James Prescott Joule and others towards the middle of the 19th
century. In 1850, Rudolf
Clausius published a paper showing that the two theories were
indeed compatible, as long as the calorists' principle of the
conservation of heat was replaced by a principle of conservation
of energy. In this way, the caloric theory was absorbed into
the annals of physics, and evolved into modern thermodynamics, in which
heat is the kinetic
energy of molecules.
See also
Notes
References
- The Caloric Theory of Gases
External links
caloric in Bulgarian: Калорична теория
caloric in Catalan: Teoria del calòric
caloric in German: Kalorische Theorie
caloric in Spanish: Teoría calórica
caloric in Persian: نظریهٔ کالریک
caloric in Finnish: Kalorikki
caloric in French: Théorie du calorique
caloric in Italian: Calorico
caloric in Japanese: カロリック説
caloric in Dutch: Theorie van
warmtevloeistof
caloric in Russian: Теплород
caloric in Swedish: Caloric
caloric in Thai: ทฤษฎีแคลอริก