Soldato
- Joined
- 6 Sep 2016
- Posts
- 13,293
what would happen if you put a computer in a vacuum? Would it work, and how would the cooling function?
also what about having a computer in a cabinet with different gases, or different air pressure?
I've always wanted to know what would happen to a CPU in shade in space. Would it overheat instantly or be super cold?
can 8 pack into space?
When it was off it would be super cold.
Once you turned it on it would quickly overheat.
Wow, thanks for the insight. Fascinating stuff - can I have your job?I have worked on satellites for almost 10 years now and although not on the on-board computers or thermal engineer I am an electronic engineer working on the communication units.
When we test units or satellites on the ground in a vacuum chamber the way to cool or heat is with conduction and radiators (LN2 for cooling and electrical heating elements for heat). As people have said if the computer was in vacuum it either needs to radiate the heat or conduct the heat away as convection obviously won't work. In space there is always a side of the spacecraft that faces away from the sun and this is used to cool the satellite down, for instance my high power amplifiers are usually bolted to the cold panel. So what is happening inside the craft is conduction with excess heat being dissipated on the cold panels facing away from the sun. Inside the modules CPU's and FPGA high power devices will have copper heat sinks to pull heat from the devices onto the metal module boxes and so onto the rest of the satellite. When I say heat sinks these are literal copper pieces with minimal mass as all we are doing is allowing heat to get out of devices onto satellite structure and then the thermal engineering will make sure the design will keep modules within design tolerances.
Thermal engineers will put different coatings on panels to allow them to radiate the correct amount of heat to keep the core satellite modules at effectively room temperature. For instance the maximum temperature swing inside the spacecraft is usually less then -20deg to +50deg in extreme cases but this is normally kept around the +10deg to +30deg. Some larger higher power satellites will have arrays of heat pipes to conduct the heat away from hot modules to radiators.