Second Law of Thermodynamics: Entropy Always Increases

The second law of thermodynamics states that in any natural process, the total entropy of an isolated system will either increase or remain the same—it never decreases.

Entropy is a measure of disorder or the number of ways energy can be distributed in a system. As energy spreads out and becomes less organized, entropy increases. This means that over time, systems naturally evolve toward a state of greater randomness or equilibrium.

Examples of this principle include:

  • Heat always flows from hotter to cooler objects, not the reverse.
  • A broken glass doesn’t spontaneously reassemble—it moves toward a more disordered state.
  • In chemical reactions, irreversible processes often increase entropy.

This law explains why perpetual motion machines are impossible and why energy conversions (like in engines) are never 100% efficient—some energy is always lost as unusable heat.

The second law governs everything from thermodynamics and chemistry to the arrow of time in the universe.

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