Topic:entropy

Click to see an enlarged picture
entropy. (Image by Brona, GFDL)
Visit our new topic page about entropy

entropy

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

entropy , quantity specifying the amount of disorder or randomness in a system bearing energy or information. Originally defined in thermodynamics in terms of heat and temperature, entropy indicates the degree to which a given quantity of thermal energy is available for doing useful work—the greater the entropy, the less available the energy. For example, consider a system composed of a hot body and a cold body; this system is ordered because the faster, more energetic molecules of the hot body are separated from the less energetic molecules of the cold body. If the bodies are placed in contact, heat will flow from the hot body to the cold one. This heat flow can be utilized by a heat engine (device which turns thermal energy into mechanical energy, or work), but once the two bodies have reached the same temperature, no more work can be done. Furthermore, the combined lukewarm bodies cannot unmix themselves into hot and cold parts in order to repeat the process. Although no energy has been lost by the heat transfer, the energy can no longer be used to do work. Thus the entropy of the system has increased. According to the second law of thermodynamics, during any process the change in entropy of a system and its surroundings is either zero or positive. In other words the entropy of the universe as a whole tends toward a maximum. This means that although energy cannot vanish because of the law of conservation of energy (see conservation laws ), it tends to be degraded from useful forms to useless ones. It should be noted that the second law of thermodynamics is statistical rather than exact; thus there is nothing to prevent the faster molecules from separating from the slow ones. However, such an occurrence is so improbable as to be impossible from a practical point of view. In information theory the term entropy is used to represent the sum of the predicted values of the data in a message.

Author not available, ENTROPY., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

New Best of Hot Body Competition. (Mature).(video recording )(Brief Article)
Video Business; 11/11/2002; Clark, Samantha; 33 words ; The New Best of Hot Body Competition and Sexy World: Cabo San Lucas have been released from Hot Body (VHS or DVD $19.95). Cabo is Hot Body's first disc to have a Spanish-language track. 800.336.4321, www.hotbody.com Read more
Razor Fitness.(Hot Body Cool Mind: Waking Energy)(PhysioBall and Magic Circle. Hot Body Cool Mind: Level 1)(Brief article)(Video recording review)
Internet Bookwatch; 4/1/2007; 220 words ; Razor Fitness Razor Digital Entertainment 12031 Ventura Blvd., Suite #3, Studio City, CA 91406 411 Video Information (publicity) PO Box 1223, Pebble Beach, CA 93953 Hosted by pilates expert Jennifer Kries, The Hot Body Cool Mind DVD series emphasizes mental and physical fitness in workout routines Read more
Hot Body International.(Coming Up)(Brief Article)
Video Store; 5/16/2004; 38 words ; Available from Hot Body International, with more than 232 VHS titles and 81 DVD titles in its Hot Body series and Sneaky Preview Amateur Audition series, are the titles Flirts in Skirts Video Magazine (VHS, DVD) and Internet Wild Women (DVD). Read more
Razor Digital Entertainment.(Hot Body Cool Mind: The Life Force Power Workout: Waking Energy, Hot Body Cool Mind: Level 1)(Brief article)(Video recording review)
Internet Bookwatch; 6/1/2007; 113 words ; Razor Digital Entertainment 12031 Ventura Blvd. #3, Studio City, CA 91406 www.razordigitalent.com Jennifer Kries' HOT BODY COOL MIND: THE LIFE FORCE POWER WORKOUT: WAKING ENERGY (1595523588, $19.99) and her HOT BODY COOL MIND: LEVEL 1 (1595523510, $19.99) each pack in powerful workouts from a Read more
Rapporteur's report on economics of energy use in agriculture
Indian Journal of Agricultural Economics; 7/1/1998; Singh, Raj Vir; 3877 words ; INTRODUCTION Energy has assumed unrelenting importance as an indispensable input for economic development. Agricultural experts and economists all over the world have marshalled ample evidence to support that energy use per hectare has direct bearing on the crop yields. Indian agriculture has Read more
Sexy and sweet. (Mature).(adult video releases from Image, Hot Body)(Brief Article)
Video Business; 6/30/2003; Clark, Samantha; 109 words ; On Aug. 5, Image gets down and dirty with Playboy collector's sets: The Complete Erotic Fantasies (four discs $39.98) and Wet & Wild Boxed Set (three discs $39.98; both prebook June 24), Playboy Exposed: Hard Hat Honeys, Playboy TV: Sexy Urban Legends 2: Seeing Is Believing ($14.98 each) and Read more
The structure and intensity of energy use: trends in five OECD nations. (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development)
The Energy Journal; 4/1/1993; Howarth, Richard B. Schipper, Lee Andersson, Bo; 4833 words ; INTRODUCTION In the controversy over the importance of restraining energy-related emissions of carbon dioxide to reduce the threat of global climate change, two issues have consistently arisen: How much will C|O.sub.2~ emissions grow in the U.S. and other nations in the absence of policy action? Read more
Energy and economic development: an assessment of the state of knowledge.
The Energy Journal; 10/1/2003; Toman, Michael A. Jemelkova, Barbora; 8507 words ; In large part, the literature on energy and development focuses on how energy demand is driven by economic development and on how energy services can be improved for developing countries. In this paper we begin with a conceptual discussion to identify the channels through which increased Read more
Cooling down a `hot' body
New Straits Times; 4/21/2007; Francis Dass; 255 words ; Francis Dass New Straits Times 04-21-2007 Cooling down a `hot' body Byline: Francis Dass Edition: Main/Lifestyle Section: Streets FEEL like your body's on fire after that bowl of tom yam? Stop by for some cooling jelly at a Chinese health food shop, writes FRANCIS DASS. THE funny thing about Read more
For adults eyes only.(Mature)(includes new adult videos, DVDs from Hot Body, Navarre, KC Sales, Wild Wild West Videos, Eclectic DVD)(Brief Article)
Video Business; 10/6/2003; Clark, Samantha; 105 words ; Navarre offers a look at Wrestling Vixens Exposed and Wrestling Vixens Unleashed on Oct. 14 (order now). Each DVD is priced at $9.99. * Hot Body unveils Fetish Fever Video Magazine, Beverly Hills Hot Legs Contest, Sneaky Preview 71 and Duets 3 on Nov. 11 (prebook Nov. 4; VHS or DVD $19.95). * On Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

entropy
World Encyclopedia entropy Quantity that specifies the disorder of a physical system; the greater the disorder, the greater the entropy. In thermodynamics , it expresses the degree to which thermal ... work – the less available it is, the greater the entropy. According to the second law of thermodynamics, a system ... Read more
thermodynamics
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ... mathematically in terms of the concept of entropy . When a body absorbs an amount of heat ... gains and the reservoir loses an amount of entropy S = Q/T. Thus, in a reversible adiabatic ... change) there is no change in the total entropy. If an amount of heat Q flows from a hot ... Read more
Thermodynamics
Chemistry: Foundations and Applications ... thermodynamics, which states that the entropy of a pure, perfect crystalline ... temperature. The increase in entropy from the lowest reachable ... inconvenient to use the change in entropy of the universe to determine ... function, called the Gibbs free energy ( G ), is introduced ... the changes in ... Read more
Heat
Science of Everyday Things ... systems — a phenomenon known as entropy. HOW IT WORKS Heat, Work, and Energy Thermodynamics ... Linked to the second law is the concept of entropy, the tendency of natural systems toward ... equal temperatures, and as this occurs, entropy increases. THE THIRD LAW OF THERMODYNAMICS ... Read more
Nernst heat theorem
A Dictionary of Psychology Nernst heat theorem n. The third law of thermodynamics , according to which as a homogeneous system approaches a temperature of absolute zero its entropy tends to zero.[Named after the German physical chemist Walther Hermann Nernst (1864–1941) who formulated it in 1906] Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

entropy