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Thermodynamic simile

🔗domilare <dominique.larre@...>

12/3/2002 12:49:07 AM

Hello, thanks for the response to my query. Yes, by dQ or dS I meant
differentials.

Maybe another way to present my question would be the following : if
the group defined "harmonic entropy", has a concept of "harmonic
energy" any meaning, and what would be the intensive factor such that
a variation of harmonic energy would be the product of that factor by
the variation of harmonic entropy ?

Greetings

Dominique Larré

🔗wallyesterpaulrus <wallyesterpaulrus@...>

12/3/2002 1:24:33 PM

--- In harmonic_entropy@y..., "domilare" <dominique.larre@w...> wrote:
> Hello, thanks for the response to my query. Yes, by dQ or dS I
meant
> differentials.
>
> Maybe another way to present my question would be the following :
if
> the group defined "harmonic entropy", has a concept of "harmonic
> energy" any meaning, and what would be the intensive factor such
that
> a variation of harmonic energy would be the product of that factor
by
> the variation of harmonic entropy ?
>
> Greetings
>
> Dominique Larré

there is one definition of "harmonic energy" that has been proposed,

http://www.mhs-muenster.de/Dozenten/Hajdu/Articles/LowEnergy.pdf

but i can't see how an intensive factor could be defined such that a
variation of harmonic energy would be the product of that factor by
the variation of harmonic entropy . . . in fact, i'd prefer a
different definition of harmonic energy if such a nice relationship
*could* be satisfied . . .

oops -- i see the link above is broken . . . i don't think that's too
important for us, though . . .