Emphysema
No. It tends to decrease.
Usable energy is inevitably used for productivity, growth and repair. In the process, usable energy is converted into unusable energy. Thus, usable energy is irretrievably lost in the form of unusable energy.
Actual research provides usable results - which will prove or disprove the theory.
According to the second law of Thermodynamics, the amount of usable energy will continuously decrease.According to the second law of Thermodynamics, the amount of usable energy will continuously decrease.According to the second law of Thermodynamics, the amount of usable energy will continuously decrease.According to the second law of Thermodynamics, the amount of usable energy will continuously decrease.
The number of possible IP address decreases as one steps down from Class A to Class C IP addresses because the availability of usable hosts. There is a decrease in the number of usable hosts from Class A to Class C IP addresses.
The expansion of the Universe is accelerating; it seems it will continue expanding forever. In this case, there won't be any specific date for an "end of the Universe"; however, the amount of usable energy will decrease over time, and the time will come when there won't be enough usable energy to support life.
"Disorder" is perhaps not the best term. As well, a better usage would be "lower usable energy" and "all closedsystems".And the answer is simply because they do. That is how our universe works. A simplistic understanding indicates that an increase in entropy (meaning less usable energy in a system) is associated with movement through time; not to have entropy increase means not going forward in time, which is physically impossible for several reasons.
usable water
Yes, usable is an adjective to describe a noun as able to be used; for example usable information.
Usable is an adjective used to describe something/someone.
Umm u spell it like this... usable
Forests help maintain water supply by absorbing rainfall and reducing runoff, thus recharging groundwater. Farmlands can decrease usable water supply by increasing water consumption, polluting water sources with chemicals and fertilizers, and degrading soil health, leading to decreased water retention capacity. Sustainably managing both forest and farmland can help maintain usable water supply.