<P> The Joule expansion (also called free expansion) is an irreversible process in thermodynamics in which a volume of gas is kept in one side of a thermally isolated container (via a small partition), with the other side of the container being evacuated . The partition between the two parts of the container is then opened, and the gas fills the whole container . </P> <P> The Joule expansion, treated as a thought experiment involving ideal gases, is a useful exercise in classical thermodynamics . It provides a convenient example for calculating changes in thermodynamic quantities, including the resulting increase in entropy of the universe (entropy production) that results from this inherently irreversible process . An actual Joule expansion experiment necessarily involves real gases; the temperature change in such a process provides a measure of intermolecular forces . </P> <P> This type of expansion is named after James Prescott Joule who used this expansion, in 1845, in his study for the mechanical equivalent of heat, but this expansion was known long before Joule e.g. by John Leslie, in the beginning of the 19th century, and studied by Joseph - Louis Gay - Lussac in 1807 with similar results as obtained by Joule . </P>

Expansion of a perfect gas into vacuum is related with