Entropy [noun]

Definition of Entropy:

deterioration

Synonyms of Entropy:


Opposite/Antonyms of Entropy:


Sentence/Example of Entropy:

In Tenet, he does this with time and entropy, proposing a world in which humans have figured out how to reverse the natural process of decline and move backward.

According to the second law of thermodynamics, the total entropy of a closed system must increase, or at least remain constant.

In a piece of rubber like Gough’s, the increase in entropy happens in the vibrational motion of the molecules.

While entropy is related to a system’s disorder, it’s more precisely described as a measure of the number of configurations a system can have.

If the entropy of the rubber’s molecular configuration decreases, then the entropy must increase elsewhere.

From a physics perspective, if you define the arrow of time to be the direction of increasing entropy, once you reach the heat death, the arrow of time ceases to exist.

The summation is defined as the increase in entropy between the initial and the final states.

All organic life and movement must cease when this maximum of entropy has been reached.

The reader is therefore warned that the proper way to say it is, "the entropy of the universe tends to a maximum."

Mirrors of anti-entropy shifted, assumed different angles, and the Invincible sheered off.