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entropy

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entropy

In thermodynamics, a parameter representing the state of disorder of a system at the atomic, ionic, or molecular level; the greater the disorder, the higher the entropy. Thus the fast-moving disordered molecules of water vapour have higher entropy than those of more ordered liquid water, which in turn have more entropy than the molecules in solid crystalline ice.

In a closed system undergoing change, entropy is a measure of the amount of energy unavailable for useful work. At absolute zero (−273.15°C/−459.67°F/0 K), when all molecular motion ceases and order is assumed to be complete, entropy is zero.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Originally defined in thermodynamics in terms of heat and temperature, entropy indicates the degree to which a given
Decision making is performing in two stages: feature extraction by computing the entropy and energy of each signal and computing fuzzy similarity index of feature sets between the reference EEG signals and the other classes of EEG signals.
Entropy demystified; the second law reduced to plain common sense.
 
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