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If you reversed a movie of coffee being mixed or wood being burned, you would see things that are impossible in the real world. Another way of saying that those reverse processes are impossible is to say that mixing coffee and burning wood are "irreversible". Irreversibility is described by an important law of nature known as the [[second law of thermodynamics]], which says that in an isolated system (a system not connected to any other system) which is undergoing change, entropy increases over time.<ref>Theoretically, coffee can be "unmixed" and wood can be "unburned", but for this you would need a "machine" that would generate more entropy than was lost in the original process. This is why the second law only holds for isolated system which means they cannot be connected to some external "machine".</ref>
Entropy does not increase indefinitely. A body of matter and radiation
While the second law, and thermodynamics in general, is accurate in its predictions of intimate interactions of complex physical systems behave, scientists are not content with simply knowing how a system behaves, but want to know also WHY it behaves the way it does. The question of why entropy increases until equilibrium is reached was answered very successfully in 1877 by a famous scientist named [[Ludwig Boltzmann]]. The theory developed by Boltzmann and others, is known as [[statistical mechanics]]. Statistical mechanics is a physical theory which explains thermodynamics in terms of the statistical behavior of the atoms and molecules which make up the system. The theory not only explains thermodynamics, but also a host of other phenomena which are otside the scope of thermodynamics.▼
▲A body of matter and radiation that is contained so as to reach an unchanging state, with no detectable flows, is said to be in its own state of internal [[thermodynamic equilibrium]]. Thermodynamic entropy has a definite value for such a body. When bodies of matter or radiation, initially in their own states of internal thermodynamic equilibrium, are brought together so as to intimately interact and reach a new joint equilibrium, then their total entropy increases. Such processes are irreversible. Some processes in nature are not helpfully described in this way. For example, for some purposes, the orbiting of the planets around the sun may be thought of as 'reversible', and is scarcely described by thermodynamics.
▲While the second law, and thermodynamics in general, is accurate in its predictions of intimate interactions of complex physical systems behave, scientists are not content with simply knowing how a system behaves, but want to know also WHY it behaves the way it does. The question of why entropy increases until equilibrium is reached was answered very successfully in 1877 by a famous scientist named [[Ludwig Boltzmann]]. The theory developed by Boltzmann and others, is known as [[statistical mechanics]]. Statistical mechanics is a physical theory which explains thermodynamics in terms of the statistical behavior of the atoms and molecules which make up the system.
==Explanation==
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