Entropy

Entropy
Author: Jeremy Rifkin
Publsiher: Bantam Books
Total Pages: 135
Release: 1981-09-01
Genre: Civilization
ISBN: 0553262998

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Offers a hard-hitting analysis of world turmoil and its ceaseless predicaments, according to the thermodynamic law of entropy--all energy flows from order to disorder, from the usable to the unusable

Entropy And Its Physical Meaning

Entropy And Its Physical Meaning
Author: J. S. Dugdale
Publsiher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 218
Release: 1996-08-28
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0748405690

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This text gives students a clear and easily understood introduction to entropy - a central concept in thermodynamics, but one which is often regarded as the most difficult to grasp. Professor Dugdale first presents a classical and historical view of entropy, looking in detail at the scientists who developed the concept, and at how they arrived at their ideas. This is followed by a statistical treatment which provides a more physical portrait of entropy, relating it to disorder and showing how physical and chemical systems tend to states of order at low temperatures. Dugdale includes here a brief account of some of the more intriguing manifestations of order in properties such as superconductivity and superfluidity.Entropy and Its Physical Meaning also includes a number of exercises which can be used for both self- learning and class work. It is intended to provide a complete understanding of the concept of entropy, making it valuable reading for undergraduates in physics, physical sciences and engineering, and for students studying thermodynamics within other science courses such as meteorology, biology and medicine.

Entropy and Information Theory

Entropy and Information Theory
Author: Robert M. Gray
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 430
Release: 2011-01-27
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9781441979704

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This book is an updated version of the information theory classic, first published in 1990. About one-third of the book is devoted to Shannon source and channel coding theorems; the remainder addresses sources, channels, and codes and on information and distortion measures and their properties. New in this edition: Expanded treatment of stationary or sliding-block codes and their relations to traditional block codes Expanded discussion of results from ergodic theory relevant to information theory Expanded treatment of B-processes -- processes formed by stationary coding memoryless sources New material on trading off information and distortion, including the Marton inequality New material on the properties of optimal and asymptotically optimal source codes New material on the relationships of source coding and rate-constrained simulation or modeling of random processes Significant material not covered in other information theory texts includes stationary/sliding-block codes, a geometric view of information theory provided by process distance measures, and general Shannon coding theorems for asymptotic mean stationary sources, which may be neither ergodic nor stationary, and d-bar continuous channels.

An Introduction to Transfer Entropy

An Introduction to Transfer Entropy
Author: Terry Bossomaier,Lionel Barnett,Michael Harré,Joseph T. Lizier
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2016-11-15
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9783319432229

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This book considers a relatively new metric in complex systems, transfer entropy, derived from a series of measurements, usually a time series. After a qualitative introduction and a chapter that explains the key ideas from statistics required to understand the text, the authors then present information theory and transfer entropy in depth. A key feature of the approach is the authors' work to show the relationship between information flow and complexity. The later chapters demonstrate information transfer in canonical systems, and applications, for example in neuroscience and in finance. The book will be of value to advanced undergraduate and graduate students and researchers in the areas of computer science, neuroscience, physics, and engineering.

Decoherence and Entropy in Complex Systems

Decoherence and Entropy in Complex Systems
Author: Hans-Thomas Elze
Publsiher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 418
Release: 2004-01-20
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3540206396

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The contributions to this volume are based on selected lectures from the first international workshop on decoherence, information, complexity and entropy (DICE). The aim of this volume is to reflect the growing importance ot common concepts behind seemingly different fields such as quantum mechanics, general relativity and statistical physics in a form accessible to nonspecialist researchers. Many presentations include original results which published here for the first time.

Entropy and Diversity

Entropy and Diversity
Author: Tom Leinster
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 457
Release: 2021-04-22
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781108832700

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Discover the mathematical riches of 'what is diversity?' in a book that adds mathematical rigour to a vital ecological debate.

Entropy Based Design and Analysis of Fluids Engineering Systems

Entropy Based Design and Analysis of Fluids Engineering Systems
Author: Greg F. Naterer,Jose A. Camberos
Publsiher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 346
Release: 2008-02-27
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781420006919

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From engineering fluid mechanics to power systems, information coding theory and other fields, entropy is key to maximizing performance in engineering systems. It serves a vital role in achieving the upper limits of efficiency of industrial processes and quality of manufactured products. Entropy based design (EBD) can shed new light on various flow

Entropy

Entropy
Author: Andreas Greven,Gerhard Keller,Gerald Warnecke
Publsiher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 376
Release: 2014-09-08
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9781400865222

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The concept of entropy arose in the physical sciences during the nineteenth century, particularly in thermodynamics and statistical physics, as a measure of the equilibria and evolution of thermodynamic systems. Two main views developed: the macroscopic view formulated originally by Carnot, Clausius, Gibbs, Planck, and Caratheodory and the microscopic approach associated with Boltzmann and Maxwell. Since then both approaches have made possible deep insights into the nature and behavior of thermodynamic and other microscopically unpredictable processes. However, the mathematical tools used have later developed independently of their original physical background and have led to a plethora of methods and differing conventions. The aim of this book is to identify the unifying threads by providing surveys of the uses and concepts of entropy in diverse areas of mathematics and the physical sciences. Two major threads, emphasized throughout the book, are variational principles and Ljapunov functionals. The book starts by providing basic concepts and terminology, illustrated by examples from both the macroscopic and microscopic lines of thought. In-depth surveys covering the macroscopic, microscopic and probabilistic approaches follow. Part I gives a basic introduction from the views of thermodynamics and probability theory. Part II collects surveys that look at the macroscopic approach of continuum mechanics and physics. Part III deals with the microscopic approach exposing the role of entropy as a concept in probability theory, namely in the analysis of the large time behavior of stochastic processes and in the study of qualitative properties of models in statistical physics. Finally in Part IV applications in dynamical systems, ergodic and information theory are presented. The chapters were written to provide as cohesive an account as possible, making the book accessible to a wide range of graduate students and researchers. Any scientist dealing with systems that exhibit entropy will find the book an invaluable aid to their understanding.