disgregation

Etymology
Borrowed from, from +.

The thermodynamics sense was introduced in 1862 by German physicist in his formulation of what is now called the.

Noun

 * 1) Separation; scattering.
 * 2) * 2006, Raquel Hervás, Pablo Gervás, Agent-Based Solutions for Natural Language Generation Tasks, Roque Marín, Eva Onaindía, Alberto Buarín, José Santos (editors), Current Topics in Artificial Intelligence: 11th Conference of the Spanish Association for Artificial Intelligence, CAEPIA 2005, Springer, LNAI 4177, page 109,
 * If the first one is called before the second one, very few disgregations will be performed on the text, since the concepts initially have no associated list of attributes.
 * 1)  A measure of the separation of the particles of a system; an early formulation of entropy.
 * 2) * 1868, R. Clausius, On the Second Fundamental Theorem of the Mechanical Theory of Heat, [1867, Lecture to the German Scientific Association], The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, page 408,
 * The disgregation of a body is consequently, among the three states of aggregation, least in the solid state, greater in the liquid state, and greatest of all in the gaseous state. In the last condition it can still be increased by the molecules separating further from each other—that is, by the gas expanding to a larger volume. In like manner, the decomposition of a chemically compound body into its elements is in general accompanied by an increase of disgregation.
 * By help of this conception the effect of heat can be simply expressed by saying that heat tends to increase the disgregation of bodies.
 * The disgregation of a body is consequently, among the three states of aggregation, least in the solid state, greater in the liquid state, and greatest of all in the gaseous state. In the last condition it can still be increased by the molecules separating further from each other—that is, by the gas expanding to a larger volume. In like manner, the decomposition of a chemically compound body into its elements is in general accompanied by an increase of disgregation.
 * By help of this conception the effect of heat can be simply expressed by saying that heat tends to increase the disgregation of bodies.