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Crookes radiometer
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===Partially correct theory=== A partial explanation is that gas [[molecule]]s hitting the warmer side of the vane will pick up some of the heat, bouncing off the vane with increased speed. Giving the molecule this extra boost effectively means that a minute pressure is exerted on the vane. The imbalance of this effect between the warmer black side and the cooler silver side means the net pressure on the vane is equivalent to a push on the black side and as a result the vanes spin round with the black side trailing. The problem with this idea is that while the faster moving molecules produce more force, they also do a better job of stopping other molecules from reaching the vane, so the net force on the vane should be the same. The greater temperature causes a decrease in local density which results in the same force on both sides. Years after this explanation was dismissed, [[Albert Einstein]] showed that the two pressures do not cancel out exactly at the edges of the vanes because of the temperature difference there. The force predicted by Einstein would be enough to move the vanes, but not fast enough.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Calaprice |first1=Alice |title=An Einstein encyclopedia |date=27 October 2015 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0691141749 |page=190|display-authors=etal}}</ref>
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