A History of Thermodynamics: The Doctrine of Energy and Entropy

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Springer Science & Business Media, 16. júl. 2007 - 320 síður
The most exciting and significant episode of scientific progress is the development of thermodynamics and electrodynamics in the 19th century and early 20th century. The nature of heat and temperature was recognized, the conservation of energy was discovered, and the realization that mass and energy are equivalent provided a new fuel, – and unlimited power. Much of this occurred in unison with the rapid technological advance provided by the steam engine, the electric motor, internal combustion engines, refrigeration and the rectification processes of the chemical industry. The availability of cheap power and cheap fuel has had its impact on society: Populations grew, the standard of living increased, the envir- ment became clean, traffic became easy, and life expectancy was raised. Knowledge fairly exploded. The western countries, where all this happened, gained in power and influence, and western culture – scientific culture – spread across the globe, and is still spreading. At the same time, thermodynamics recognized the stochastic and probabilistic aspect of natural processes. It turned out that the doctrine of energy and entropy rules the world; the first ingredient – energy – is deterministic, as it were, and the second – entropy – favours randomness. Both tendencies compete, and they find the precarious balance needed for stability and change alike.
 

Efni

Caloric
9
James Prescott
21
Electromagnetic Energy
29
Albert
35
Heat Engines
47
Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot Benoît Pierre Émile Clapeyron William Thomson Lord Kelvin
68
Terroristic Nimbus of Entropy and Second Law Modern Version of Zeroth First and Second Laws
77
James Clerk Maxwell
87
Helium
182
Full Degeneration and BoseEinstein Condensation
192
Symmetric Hyperbolic Systems
256
Field Equations
265
Ferencz Jüttner
289
Subramanyan Chandrasekhar
296
Metabolism
306
On Thermodynamics of What is Life?
316

Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann
94
52
106
72
113

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