We consider an ideal experiment in which unlimited nonprojective quantum
measurements are sequentially performed on a system that is initially entangled
with a distant one. At each step of the sequence, the measurements are randomly
chosen between two. However, regardless of which measurement is chosen or which
outcome is obtained, the quantum state of the pair always remains entangled. We
show that the classical simulation of the reduced state of the distant system
requires not only unlimited rounds of communication, but also that the distant
system has infinite memory. Otherwise, a thermodynamical argument predicts
heating at a distance. Our proposal can be used for experimentally ruling out
nonlocal finite-memory classical models of quantum theory