The story of how diesel engines and gas turbines, used to power cargo
ships and jet airplanes, made today's globally integrated economy
possible. The many books on globalization published over the past few
years range from claims that the world is flat to an unlikely
rehabilitation of Genghis Khan as a pioneer of global commerce.
Missing from these accounts is a consideration of the technologies
behind the creation of the globalized economy. What makes it possible
for us to move billions of tons of raw materials and manufactured
goods from continent to continent? Why are we able to fly almost
anywhere on the planet within twenty-four hours? In Prime Movers of
Globalization, Vaclav Smil offers a history of two key technical
developments that have driven globalization: the high-compression
non-sparking internal combustion engines invented by Rudolf Diesel in
the 1890s and the gas turbines designed by Frank Whittle and
Hans-Joachim Pabst von Ohain in the 1930s. The massive diesel engines
that power cargo ships and the gas turbines that propel jet engines,
Smil argues, are more important to the global economy than any
corporate structure or international trade agreement. Smil compares
the efficiency and scale of these two technologies to prime movers of
the past, including the sail and the steam engine. The lengthy
processes of development, commercialization, and diffusion that the
diesel engine and the gas turbine went through, he argues, provide
perfect examples of gradual technical advances that receive little
attention but have resulted in epochal shifts in global affairs and
the global economy.
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The History and Impact of Diesel Engines and Gas Turbines
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780262297042
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Random House Publishing Services
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter