81 research outputs found
Limits, applicability and generalizations of the Landauer's erasure principle
Almost sixty years since Landauer linked the erasure of information with an
increase of entropy, his famous erasure principle and byproducts like
reversible computing are still subjected to debates in the scientific
community. In this work we use the Liouville theorem to establish three
different types of the relation between manipulation of information by a
logical gate and the change of its physical entropy, corresponding to three
types of the final state of environment. A time-reversible relation can be
established when the final states of environment corresponding to different
logical inputs are macroscopically distinguishable, showing a path to
reversible computation and erasure of data with no entropy cost. A weak
relation, giving the entropy change of for an erasure gate, can be
deduced without any thermodynamical argument, only requiring the final states
of environment to be macroscopically indistinguishable. The common strong
relation that links entropy cost to heat requires the final states of
environment to be in a thermal equilibrium. We argue in this work that much of
the misunderstanding around the Landauer's erasure principle stems from not
properly distinguishing the limits and applicability of these three different
relations. Due to new technological advances, we emphasize the importance of
taking into account the time-reversible and weak types of relation to link the
information manipulation and entropy cost in erasure gates beyond the
considerations of environments in thermodynamic equilibrium.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figure
Dynamics of Current, Charge and Mass
Electricity plays a special role in our lives and life. Equations of electron
dynamics are nearly exact and apply from nuclear particles to stars. These
Maxwell equations include a special term the displacement current (of vacuum).
Displacement current allows electrical signals to propagate through space.
Displacement current guarantees that current is exactly conserved from inside
atoms to between stars, as long as current is defined as Maxwell did, as the
entire source of the curl of the magnetic field. We show how the Bohm
formulation of quantum mechanics allows easy definition of current. We show how
conservation of current can be derived without mention of the polarization or
dielectric properties of matter. Matter does not behave the way physicists of
the 1800's thought it does with a single dielectric constant, a real positive
number independent of everything. Charge moves in enormously complicated ways
that cannot be described in that way, when studied on time scales important
today for electronic technology and molecular biology. Life occurs in ionic
solutions in which charge moves in response to forces not mentioned or
described in the Maxwell equations, like convection and diffusion. Classical
derivations of conservation of current involve classical treatments of
dielectrics and polarization in nearly every textbook. Because real dielectrics
do not behave in a classical way, classical derivations of conservation of
current are often distrusted or even ignored. We show that current is conserved
exactly in any material no matter how complex the dielectric, polarization or
conduction currents are. We believe models, simulations, and computations
should conserve current on all scales, as accurately as possible, because
physics conserves current that way. We believe models will be much more
successful if they conserve current at every level of resolution, the way
physics does.Comment: Version 4 slight reformattin
Can the wave function in configuration space be replaced by single-particle wave functions in physical space?
The ontology of Bohmian mechanics includes both the universal wave function
(living in 3N-dimensional configuration space) and particles (living in
ordinary 3-dimensional physical space). Proposals for understanding the
physical significance of the wave function in this theory have included the
idea of regarding it as a physically-real field in its 3N-dimensional space, as
well as the idea of regarding it as a law of nature. Here we introduce and
explore a third possibility in which the configuration space wave function is
simply eliminated -- replaced by a set of single-particle pilot-wave fields
living in ordinary physical space. Such a re-formulation of the Bohmian
pilot-wave theory can exactly reproduce the statistical predictions of ordinary
quantum theory. But this comes at the rather high ontological price of
introducing an infinite network of interacting potential fields (living in
3-dimensional space) which influence the particles' motion through the
pilot-wave fields. We thus introduce an alternative approach which aims at
achieving empirical adequacy (like that enjoyed by GRW type theories) with a
more modest ontological complexity, and provide some preliminary evidence for
optimism regarding the (once popular but prematurely-abandoned) program of
trying to replace the (philosophically puzzling) configuration space wave
function with a (totally unproblematic) set of fields in ordinary physical
space.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Synthese Special Issue: Space-time
and the wave functio
Three types of Landauer's erasure principle : a microscopic view
Altres ajuts: acords transformatius de la UABAn important step to incorporate information in the second law of thermodynamics was done by Landauer, showing that the erasure of information implies an increase in heat. Most attempts to justify Landauer's erasure principle are based on thermodynamic argumentations. Here, using just the time-reversibility of classical microscopic laws, we identify three types of the Landauer's erasure principle depending on the relation between the two final environments: the one linked to a logical input 1 and the other to logical input 0. The strong type (which is the original Landauer's formulation) requires the final environments to be in thermal equilibrium. The intermediate type giving the entropy change of kln 2 occurs when the two final environments are identical macroscopic states. Finally, the weak Landauer's principle, providing information erasure with no entropy change, when the two final environments are macroscopically different. Even though the above results are formally valid for classical erasure gates, a discussion on their natural extension to quantum scenarios is presented. This paper strongly suggests that the original Landauer's principle (based on the assumption of thermalized environments) is fully reasonable for microelectronics, but it becomes less reasonable for future few-atoms devices working at THz frequencies. Thus, the weak and intermediate Landauer's principles, where the erasure of information is not necessarily linked to heat dissipation, are worth investigating
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