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Restructure: USD fix + updated descendants
Description:Replace dollar signs with USD; correct descendants section
# [TECH] Steam Engine & Heat Engines **The Steam Engine** is the first practical technology for converting heat into mechanical work, developed by Watt, Newcomen, and others (1712–1790), and the foundational technology of the Industrial Revolution. ## Overview Thomas Newcomen's atmospheric engine (1712) pumped water from mines. James Watt's improvements (1769 patent: separate condenser; 1782: double-acting engine; 1784: rotary motion) made the steam engine a general-purpose prime mover. By 1800 Boulton & Watt had sold over 400 engines; by 1850 steam power in Britain exceeded 1 million horsepower. The steam engine preceded formal thermodynamics — it motivated Carnot's analysis. The engine also created demand for precision machining, fuelling the machine tool industry and enabling the manufacture of other precision machinery. ## Key Actors - **Companies**: Boulton & Watt (UK, 1775); Stephenson (locomotives, 1814); Corliss Engine Co. (US) - **Inventors**: Thomas Newcomen (1664–1729), James Watt (1736–1819), Richard Trevithick (1771–1833) ## Key Patents - Watt, J. UK Patent No. 913 (1769) — separate condenser - Watt, J. UK Patent No. 1321 (1782) — rotary motion & double-acting engine ## Economic Value The steam engine enabled the Industrial Revolution, which increased UK GDP roughly 14× between 1700 and 1870 and transformed global trade. Economists estimate the cumulative GDP gain from industrialisation attributable to steam at **\$USD 30–60 trillion** over two centuries (present-value adjusted estimates vary widely). Modern steam turbines generate ~80% of world electricity (~\$USD 2T/year generation revenue). ## Notes Crafts & Harley (1992) estimate TFP growth from steam at 0.3–0.5% per year across the UK economy, 1760–1840. Weil (2012, *Economic Growth*) attributes ~25% of 19th-century UK productivity growth to steam. Modern gas/steam turbines: IEA World Energy Outlook 2023. ## What This Enables - **[TECH] Internal Combustion Engine** — The ICE is the evolutionary successor: combustion inside the cylinder replaces an external boiler, dramatically improving power density. - **[TECH] Petroleum Refining** — Steam-powered rotary drills unlocked deep oil wells;SCI] Classical Thermodynamics** — Carnot (1824) built thermodynamics to understand why steamdrove early refinery equipmentengines have a maximum efficiency — a direct scientific response to the technology. # Parents * [SCI] Classical Thermodynamics * [SCI] Newtonian Mechanics
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