Malleable Thermodynamics Theory
A theoretical extension of thermodynamics proposing that the laws of thermodynamic behavior (entropy, energy conservation, etc.) may not be absolute across all scales or under extreme conditions. In certain cosmological contexts (e.g., expansion of the universe) or exotic systems (e.g., negative temperature populations), classical laws appear modified. Malleable thermodynamics suggests that thermodynamic laws might be emergent or context‑dependent, opening possibilities for local entropy reduction or novel energy cycles. It’s a speculative but rigorous area studied in quantum thermodynamics and cosmology.
Malleable Thermodynamics Theory Example: “His model of the early universe used malleable thermodynamics to explain how low entropy initial conditions could arise from a prior phase where the arrow of time was reversed.”
Malleable Thermodynamics Theory by Dumu The Void April 25, 2026
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