Orders of magnitude (entropy)
From HandWiki
The following list shows different orders of magnitude of entropy.
Factor (J K−1) | Value | Item |
---|---|---|
10−24 | 9.5699×10−24 J K−1 | Entropy equivalent of one bit of information, equal to k times ln(2)[1] |
10−23 | 1.381×10−23 | Boltzmann Constant, entropy equivalent of one nat of information. |
101 | 5.74 J K−1 | Standard entropy of 1 mole of graphite[2] |
1033 | ≈ 1035 J K−1 | Entropy of the Sun (given as ≈ 1042 erg K−1 in Bekenstein (1973))[3] |
1054 | 1.5 × 1054 J K−1 | Entropy of a black hole of one solar mass (given as ≈ 1060 erg K−1 in Bekenstein (1973))[3] |
1081 | 4.3 × 1081 J K−1 | One estimate of the theoretical maximum entropy of the universe[4][5] |
See also
- Orders of magnitude (data), relates to information entropy
- Order of magnitude (terminology)
References
- ↑ Jean-Bernard Brissaud (14 February 2005). "The Meaning of Entropy". Entropy, 2005, 7[1], 68–96. http://www.mdpi.org/entropy/papers/e7010068.pdf. page 72 (page 5 of pdf)
- ↑ Chung Chieh. "Entropy: A Study Guide". http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~cchieh/cact/applychem/entropy.html.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Jacob D. Bekenstein (1973). "Black Holes and Entropy". Physical Review D 7 (8): 2333–2346. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.7.2333. Bibcode: 1973PhRvD...7.2333B. http://www.physics.princeton.edu/~mcdonald/examples/QM/bekenstein_prd_7_2333_73.pdf.
- ↑ Chas A. Egan; Charles H. Lineweaver (25 January 2010). "A Larger Estimate of the Entropy of the Universe". The Astrophysical Journal 710 (2): 1825–1834. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/710/2/1825. Bibcode: 2010ApJ...710.1825E. "3.1 x 10^104k".
- ↑ Calculated: 3.1e104 * k = 3.1e104 * 1.381e-23 J/K = 4.3e81 J/K
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders of magnitude (entropy).
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