that obama is the worst prez ever.
No, average length and entropy are different metrics. Entropy measures the amount of uncertainty or randomness in a system, while average length refers to the mean length of a code in information theory. They are related concepts in the context of coding theory but are not equal.
usually a change in temperature.... OR PRESSURE Which all mean a change in entropy of the system
That he either found it to be incorrect or heard from a majority of other scientists working in the same field of study that the hypothesis isn't true. Though it's almost always the first one I said.
If entropy is taken to mean the amount of "randomness," then you could fight it by organizing matter (e.g. clean up your room). But in time, everything tends towards disorder; entropy increases.
it's the problem of surface area -to- volume ratio that mean there is no fitting between increasing of surface area and increasing of volume
Assuming you mean can entropy be reduced; the answer is yes. Only in an open system such as our planet. The universe is a closed systems. The entropy of the universe cannot be reduced. Chemical changes can reduced entropy in an open system. When gas turns into a liquid or when a liquid turns into a solid; entropy is reduced.
Yes, according to the second law of thermodynamics, entropy tends to increase in a closed system. In a cold system, if the temperature is below the surroundings, the heat can flow from the surroundings to the system, increasing the system's entropy.
The total entropy of a closed system must always increase or remain constant according to the second law of thermodynamics. Violating this principle would mean that energy is not being conserved or that the system is moving toward a state of lower disorder, which is not in line with the natural direction of processes.
No, average length and entropy are different metrics. Entropy measures the amount of uncertainty or randomness in a system, while average length refers to the mean length of a code in information theory. They are related concepts in the context of coding theory but are not equal.
usually a change in temperature.... OR PRESSURE Which all mean a change in entropy of the system
Do you mean relativity?
Simply put, because there is not enough evidence to support it. "Rejected by scientists" should not be taken to always mean "scientist believe it is impossible" - rather, consistent evidence that support the hypothesis has not been produced.
The system becomes more random.
Delta S (ΔS) represents the change in entropy of a system during a process. Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness of a system; thus, a positive ΔS indicates an increase in disorder, while a negative ΔS signifies a decrease in disorder. In thermodynamics, ΔS is crucial for understanding the spontaneity of a reaction, as spontaneous processes tend to have a positive change in entropy.
Standard form has nothing to do with increasing or decreasing.
Not increasing means not getting larger, not getting more, not growing. Examples: The area of rock on the beach is not increasing in size. The money in her savings account is not increasing because she stopped putting money in it. The tree's truck is not increasing in circumference because the tree is dead. The opposite of increasing is decreasing, but not increasing does not mean something is decreasing. It means it is staying the same.
The only words I know that mean that are in Latin, not English: ordo ab chao