The principle of thermoacoustic refrigeration is that sound waves create regions of alternating compression (high pressure) and rarefaction (low pressure) in the gas. As long as the gas is thermally insulated from the surroundings, these changes in pressure also cause changes in temperature. A set of metal plates is arranged in the gas chamber so that some of the plates are exposed to high-pressure hot regions of gas, and the others to low-pressure cold regions. The heat from the hot plates is conducted to the outside of the refrigerator, while heat from the inside of the refrigerator flows into the cold plates. The net effect is that heat is pumped from the inside of the refrigerator to the outside.