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  • The earth receives about 90 petajoules of energy from the sun every second.

  • That’s a lotenough to satisfy all human energy needs thousands of times over.

  • However, the earth also radiates an equal amount of energy back into space as heat.

  • (An almost equal amount, anyway -- the Earth is gradually heating up, but that's another

  • story.)

  • So if energy in equals energy out, how can we possibly be using any energy to do anything?

  • What matters, it turns out, isn’t simply energyit’s useful energy.

  • And energy is useful when it comes packaged in a low-entropy form.

  • The total amount of energy in any closed system can’t change, of course -- energy is conserved.

  • But that energy can be in different states of usefulness.

  • There is useful energy in the water behind a dam, which will flow until the level is

  • the same on both sides, but will never go backup.”

  • Or in hot tea, which will melt a cold ice cube until they reach a medium temperature.

  • You never see tepid tea spontaneously generate an ice cube while heating up, even though

  • the total energy would be the same.

  • So, useful energy is low entropy, out-of-equilibrium energy that can be put to work, to turn a

  • turbine or push a piston or melt an ice cube.

  • Useless energy, meanwhile, can’t be put to work.

  • It’s out there in the form of waste heat or noise or the potential energy of a ball

  • just sitting on the ground: we can't really do anything with it.

  • For example, gasoline and air carry useful, low-entropy energy.

  • By burning them together, we can accelerate a car, drive for a while, then put on the

  • brakes and stop.

  • The total energy of the world remains constant during the trip, but useful chemical energy

  • is converted into useless, high-entropy heat and noise.

  • The energy is still there, but we can't reclaim it to power any more cars, as convenient as

  • that would be.

  • And thus it is with the earth.

  • The sun sends us energy in a convenient, useful, low-entropy form, mainly as photons of visible

  • light.

  • This energy gets absorbed and used and degraded by various processes here on Earth, until

  • we radiate it away in a much higher-entropy form: lots of infrared photons.

  • For every visible photon we receive, the Earth radiates about twenty infrared photons out

  • into space.

  • Even though there’s a balance of energy in with energy out, the entropy of the energy

  • has gone up twenty times.

  • The Sun, in fact, is only a source of useful energy because it's a hot, bright spot in

  • a cold, dark sky.

  • If the whole sky were the temperature of the Sun, our planet would receive a lot more energy,

  • but the Earth would quickly average out to a state of high-entropy equilibrium, with

  • everything at the temperature of the Sun.

  • So things like driving or living would be impossiblenot because there’s insufficient

  • energy, but because you can’t do anything when all the energy has averaged out.

  • In equilibrium, all energy is equally useless, nothing ever changes, and time's arrow ceases

  • to have any meaning.

  • Hey, Henry here, thanks for watching.

  • This is the fourth video in a series about time and entropy made in collaboration with

  • physicist Sean Carroll.

  • The series is supported with funding from Google’s Making and Science initiative,

  • which seeks to encourage more young people (and people of all ages) to learn about and

  • fall in love with science and the world around them, and the videos are based off of Sean’s

  • bookThe Big Picture: On the Origins of Life, Meaning, and the Universe Itself,”

  • which you can find online or in bookstores around the world.

The earth receives about 90 petajoules of energy from the sun every second.

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