We review the role of zero-temperature entropy in several closely-related
contexts in QCD. The first is entropy associated with disordered condensates,
including . The second is vacuum entropy arising from QCD
solitons such as center vortices, yielding confinement and chiral symmetry
breaking. The third is entanglement entropy, which is entropy associated with a
pure state, such as the QCD vacuum, when the state is partially unobserved and
unknown. Typically, entanglement entropy of an unobserved three-volume scales
not with the volume but with the area of its bounding surface. The fourth
manifestation of entropy in QCD is the configurational entropy of
light-particle world-lines and flux tubes; we argue that this entropy is
critical for understanding how confinement produces chiral symmetry breakdown,
as manifested by a dynamically-massive quark, a massless pion, and a <qˉq> condensate.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures. Preprint version of invited review for Modern
Physics Letters