Understanding Entropy: Order vs Disorder

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In summary, the entropy of a system is proportional to the number of ways that the system can be arranged and the system will tend to move towards a state with the highest entropy.
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danihel
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Hi,
I'm sorry and hope this forum allows people who don't study but are interested in physics to post their primitive questions:
I like watching documentaries and in every documentary on physics that i watched when it came to entropy, it was simply described as disorder as if that was a thing.
Is it only me being retarded? I mean, to me- "order" is a word that points to just anybody's personal preference of organization of things in any sort of dimension (being it space/time, alphabet or numbering system...) based on his current practical needs or cultural bias. Maybe Jackson Pollock had different concept of order than Rothko. Is an English garden of higher entropy than a French one? There is a individual sense of order just like there's a sense of beauty but there is no universal "order".
One of the few things i know about entropy is that it manifests as dissipating heat and as the entropy grows with time and heat dissipates it leads to homogeneity. What confuses me even more is that homogeneity gives me the impression of order rather than disorder and the beginnings of big bang although hot seem to me much more homogenous than the universe at this point.

It fascinates me very much but this important topic confuses me more than anything else from classical physics, if anyone could help me make the meaning of entropy a little more clear I would be very grateful.
 
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Basically, the idea is that because there are a lot more ways how things can be in "disorder" than ways how they can be in "order", it is statistically extremely probable that a system of a large number of molecules is at any given moment moving towards a state of higher disorder.

In statistical mechanics, entropy of a macrostate (macroscopically observed state of a physical system) depends on the number of microstates (combinations of states of individual molecules) that correspond to that observed macrostate. Therefore, increase of entropy is basically a statistical phenomenon, a system is very likely to move towards a state that can be achieved in many ways.
 
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  • #3
@hilbert2: Thanks a ton! So can i throw the words "order/disorder" out of the window and just say: "Antropy is the measure of probability of a particular state of a physical system to be delivered by random movement of its components(particles)?"
So a limited set of particles in a physical system can be assigned a limited number of combinations of vector quantities and all the combinations of quantities give rise to a lesser number of combinations of states as the time passes.. and the state that is produced by most of the combinations of vector quantities is of highest entropy?
So the universe started at the most improbable state and ends at the most probable? Seems like the universe is losing it's ridiculousness :)
 
  • #4
Is it only me being retarded? I mean, to me- "order" is a word that points to just anybody's personal preference of organization of things in any sort of dimension (being it space/time, alphabet or numbering system...) based on his current practical needs or cultural bias. Maybe Jackson Pollock had different concept of order than Rothko. Is an English garden of higher entropy than a French one? There is a individual sense of order just like there's a sense of beauty but there is no universal "order".

In classical mechanics we define entropy as [itex]S = -k_B \sum_i p_i \ln p_i [/itex].

With this definition in mind, we call states with low entropy "ordered" and states with high entropy "disordered."
Thus, we have very carefully defined what we mean by "order" in the physical context. There is no ambiguity.

One of the few things i know about entropy is that it manifests as dissipating heat and as the entropy grows with time and heat dissipates it leads to homogeneity. What confuses me even more is that homogeneity gives me the impression of order rather than disorder and the beginnings of big bang although hot seem to me much more homogenous than the universe at this point.

Be careful here. Homogeneity can be used to describe systems of both high and low entropy.

Case 1) Imagine that you roll 1,000 dice, and they all come up 6. This is a very ordered result (low entropy) but it is also very homogeneous.

Case 2) Imagine a situation where you take ten different colors of paint and mix them together to get a a uniform (homogeneous) brown. if you look at the pain under a powerful microscope you'd see a random mixture of all ten colors. This is a state a maximum entropy or disorder.
 
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@the_wolfman: Thanks a lot! I'm afraid the only thing i understand from the equation above is (S) as entropy and (k) as Boltzman's konstant, but i guess i would need to study more physics to understand the rest.
Still, could anyone please tell me, based on my second post, whether i understood the point of entropy right?
 
  • #6
danihel said:
Still, could anyone please tell me, based on my second post, whether i understood the point of entropy right?

Yes, you understood the point.
 
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1. What is entropy?

Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness in a system. It is a concept that is commonly used in physics, chemistry, and information theory to describe the behavior of systems.

2. How is entropy related to order and disorder?

Entropy is inversely related to order. This means that as the level of order in a system increases, the level of entropy decreases. Conversely, as the level of disorder increases, the level of entropy increases.

3. Why is entropy important?

Entropy is important because it helps us understand the behavior and changes in physical, chemical, and information systems. It is a fundamental concept in thermodynamics, which is the study of energy and its transformations.

4. Can entropy be reversed?

In closed systems, the overall entropy tends to increase over time, meaning that it cannot be reversed. However, in open systems, where energy and matter can enter and leave, localized decreases in entropy are possible through the input of energy.

5. How can we increase order in a system?

In order to increase order in a system, energy must be put into the system to create more organized patterns. This requires work, as energy tends to spread out and increase entropy. Examples of increasing order include crystallization, photosynthesis, and building structures.

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