No - to straighten a messy room requires work, and in the process energy is released as heat into the environment. The room may become more orderly, but the net effect on the universe is an increase in entropy because of the heat released.
On one hand, it takes some work to mess a room up in the first place so it is easier to leave it neat than to mess it up. Once it is messed up though, it requires work to clean it up so it is easier to leave it messy than to clean it. In both instances, when the work is performed, it increases the entropy of the universe.
From a practical standpoint, it is easier to carry out necessary activities in a neat room than a messy room, so on balance it requires less work overall to keep a room neat and perform activities in the room than to let it get messy and try to carry out activities in the room. In a messy room things get lost so a lot more work goes into finding what is needed than would be required to keep it neat. Messy rooms require frequent moving of stuff to get to what you need - which generally adds up to more work than just placing things where they belong. Remember, any time you perform work you increase the entropy of the universe. Keeping things neat minimizes the increase.
Not enough information. The refrigerator must also follow the Second Law.The energy released to the room is the energy removed from the room, PLUS the energy used by the refrigerator (for example, as electrical energy).
A refrigerator is a "heat pump." That is, it pumps heat out of a cold area (inside) to a warm area (the room). Thus, when working at its best, a refrigerator is a heater. However, the laws of thermodynamics assures us that it will always use more energy than it puts to work, so that extra energy will also heat the room. That is why your air conditioner (another kind of heat pump) is outdoors: if it were indoors, it would heat the room it was trying to cool!
the second law of thermodynamics proves that heat always flows from hot to cold. It is hard to give good every day examples, since when you open the refrigerator door you feel cold but actually the room is warming the fridge.
it is easier to squash a gas because the particles are so spread out. this means they have room to move therefore they can all move into one place so can be squashed. they are not joined will means they can move anywhere.
An upright broom is easiest to balance when the heavier side is away from your hand. This means you have plenty of room to balance the weight.
Drawers are much better for a messy room as it is easier to store and even hide ephemera.
messy, clean, large, packed full, crammed with stuff, neat, tidy
Messy
Think about it this way. In a eukaryotic cell, the DNA is in a neat, clean room (nucleus). In a prokaryotic cell, the DNA is in a messy yard with no room. The DNA just floats in the prokaryote.
The best way to clean rooms is to clear up messy areas. You can either get rid of stuff in your room by throwing it in the garbage or you can reorganize the arrangement of your room and make it more neat.
i do not think there is a past tense of "neat"...."your room is very neat" (present tense) and "her room was very neat" (past tense)...same word.
A messy room is often referred to as cluttered, disorganized, or untidy.
Steven, get up here and clean your very messy room! Also, That is such a messy room , I don't know how you can walk in there! Hope this works!
Majorly clothes and books make the dorm room messy if left unorganized.
There are many ways to organize a messy room. The best way to organize a messy room is to purchase storage containers such as boxes and shelves to put away clothing, books, and other items cluttering the room.
Shel Silverstein wrote "Messy Room" for children, using humor and creativity to capture the messy and imaginative world of childhood. The poem humorously describes a messy room and the playful chaos that children often create in their living spaces.
Neat - 2004 Room of Shame was released on: USA: 4 February 2005