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Does this mean that gravity can reverse the normal pattern of progress from low to high entropy?
In our little bit of the universe, mass clumped together is in a lower energy state than mass spread out throughout space. So thermodynamics tends to favor this lower-energy state…………However, on cosmic scales, it seems that a state with matter far apart has lower energy than a state with matter close together, driving the cosmic expansion of the universe. The source of this Dark Energy is still rather mysterious.
Less room => Fewer microstatesMore energy => More microstatesCompression of gas in a cylinder by a piston:Less room and more energy => number of microstates stays constantCompression of gas in a gas cloud by gravity:Less room and more energy => number of microstates stays constant
Compression of matter into a black hole by gravity:Hmm .. well... the matter is transformed to something else that has a very large number of microstates
https://ch301.cm.utexas.edu/section2.php?target=thermo/second-law/microstates-boltzmann.html
We can give each molecule one unit of energy (1 + 1 + 1 = 3 total). There is only one way to accomplish this. Each molecule needs to have one unit of energy.
…. molecules a, b, and c are equivalent…..
Alternatively, we can give all three units to just one molecule, and zero energy to the other two (3 + 0 + 0 = 3 total). There are three ways to accomplish this since we can give all the energy to either molecule a, or molecule b, or molecule c.
Finally, we can give 1 unit of energy to one of the molecules, and 2 units of energy to another one. It turns out there are six possible ways to accomplish this distribution of energy
Is there a wave of the hand to go with this?
You also have position to consider. Every particle has to be somewhere.
The rule is not that when matter is compressed, maybe by gravity, the number of microstates increases. There are counter examples.
For any two fermions we can arrange frames of reference that make them identical. So that they have the same spin, momentum and kinetic energy.
Such as?
Quote from: jeffreyHFor any two fermions we can arrange frames of reference that make them identical. So that they have the same spin, momentum and kinetic energy.Pauli's exclusion principle says that no two fermions (eg electrons) can be in exactly the same quantum state.If you transform the frame of reference of one fermion, the other's state is also transformed (in the new frame of reference) so they are still distinct.Of course, you need to define the scope of your quantum system...See more at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pauli_exclusion_principle