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Keywords = Maxwell’s demon

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12 pages, 414 KiB  
Article
Maxwell’s Demon Is Foiled by the Entropy Cost of Measurement, Not Erasure
by Ruth E. Kastner
Foundations 2025, 5(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/foundations5020016 - 22 May 2025
Viewed by 1143
Abstract
I dispute the conventional claim that the second law of thermodynamics is saved from a “Maxwell’s demon” by the entropy cost of information erasure and show that instead it is measurement that incurs the entropy cost. Thus, Brillouin, who identified measurement as savior [...] Read more.
I dispute the conventional claim that the second law of thermodynamics is saved from a “Maxwell’s demon” by the entropy cost of information erasure and show that instead it is measurement that incurs the entropy cost. Thus, Brillouin, who identified measurement as savior of the second law, was essentially correct, and putative refutations of his view, such as Bennett’s claim to measure without entropy cost, are seen to fail when the applicable physics is taken into account. I argue that the tradition of attributing the defeat of Maxwell’s demon to erasure rather than to measurement arose from unphysical classical idealizations that do not hold for real gas molecules, as well as a physically ungrounded recasting of physical thermodynamical processes into computational and information-theoretic conceptualizations. I argue that the fundamental principle that saves the second law is the quantum uncertainty principle applying to the need to localize physical states to precise values of observables in order to effect the desired disequilibria aimed at violating the second law. I obtain the specific entropy cost for localizing a molecule in the Szilard engine and show that it coincides with the quantity attributed to Landauer’s principle. I also note that an experiment characterized as upholding an entropy cost of erasure in a “quantum Maxwell’s demon” actually demonstrates an entropy cost of measurement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physical Sciences)
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33 pages, 6442 KiB  
Article
Genomic-Thermodynamic Phase Synchronization: Maxwell’s Demon-like Regulation of Cell Fate Transition
by Masa Tsuchiya, Kenichi Yoshikawa and Alessandro Giuliani
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2025, 26(10), 4911; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms26104911 - 20 May 2025
Viewed by 1073
Abstract
Dynamic criticality—the balance between order and chaos—is fundamental to genome regulation and cellular transitions. In this study, we investigate the distinct behaviors of gene expression dynamics in MCF-7 breast cancer cells under two stimuli: heregulin (HRG), which promotes cell fate transitions, and epidermal [...] Read more.
Dynamic criticality—the balance between order and chaos—is fundamental to genome regulation and cellular transitions. In this study, we investigate the distinct behaviors of gene expression dynamics in MCF-7 breast cancer cells under two stimuli: heregulin (HRG), which promotes cell fate transitions, and epidermal growth factor (EGF), which binds to the same receptor but fails to induce cell-fate changes. We model the system as an open, nonequilibrium thermodynamic system and introduce a convergence-based approach for the robust estimation of information-thermodynamic metrics. Our analysis reveals that the Shannon entropy of the critical point (CP) dynamically synchronizes with the entropy of the rest of the whole expression system (WES), reflecting coordinated transitions between ordered and disordered phases. This phase synchronization is driven by net mutual information scaling with CP entropy dynamics, demonstrating how the CP governs genome-wide coherence. Furthermore, higher-order mutual information emerges as a defining feature of the nonlinear gene expression network, capturing collective effects beyond simple pairwise interactions. By achieving thermodynamic phase synchronization, the CP orchestrates the entire expression system. Under HRG stimulation, the CP becomes active, functioning as a Maxwell’s demon with dynamic, rewritable chromatin memory to guide a critical transition in cell fate. In contrast, under EGF stimulation, the CP remains inactive in this strategic role, passively facilitating a non-critical transition. These findings establish a biophysical framework for cell fate determination, paving the way for innovative approaches in cancer research and stem cell therapy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Molecular Advances and Insights in Cancer Genomics)
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13 pages, 359 KiB  
Article
Entropic Probability and Context States
by Benjamin Schumacher and Michael D. Westmoreland
Entropy 2025, 27(2), 187; https://doi.org/10.3390/e27020187 - 12 Feb 2025
Viewed by 636
Abstract
In a previous paper, we introduced an axiomatic system for information thermodynamics, deriving an entropy function that includes both thermodynamic and information components. From this function, we derived an entropic probability distribution for certain uniform collections of states. Here, we extend the concept [...] Read more.
In a previous paper, we introduced an axiomatic system for information thermodynamics, deriving an entropy function that includes both thermodynamic and information components. From this function, we derived an entropic probability distribution for certain uniform collections of states. Here, we extend the concept of entropic probability to more general collections, augmenting the states by reservoir and context states. This leads to an abstract concept of free energy and establishes a relation between free energy, information erasure, and generalized work. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Thermodynamics)
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24 pages, 2522 KiB  
Article
Not All Fluctuations Are Created Equal: Spontaneous Variations in Thermodynamic Function
by James P. Crutchfield and Cina Aghamohammadi
Entropy 2024, 26(11), 894; https://doi.org/10.3390/e26110894 - 23 Oct 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1010
Abstract
We identify macroscopic functioning arising during a thermodynamic system’s typical and atypical behaviors, thereby describing system operations over the entire set of fluctuations. We show how to use the information processing second law to determine functionality for atypical realizations and how to calculate [...] Read more.
We identify macroscopic functioning arising during a thermodynamic system’s typical and atypical behaviors, thereby describing system operations over the entire set of fluctuations. We show how to use the information processing second law to determine functionality for atypical realizations and how to calculate the probability of distinct modalities occurring via the large-deviation rate function, extended to include highly correlated, memoryful environments and systems. Altogether, the results complete a theory of functional fluctuations for complex thermodynamic nanoscale systems operating over finite periods. In addition to constructing the distribution of functional modalities, one immediate consequence is a cautionary lesson: ascribing a single, unique functional modality to a thermodynamic system, especially one on the nanoscale, can be misleading, likely masking an array of simultaneous, parallel thermodynamic transformations that together may also be functional. In this way, functional fluctuation theory alters how we conceive of the operation of biological cellular processes, the goals of engineering design, and the robustness of evolutionary adaptation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Thermodynamics)
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14 pages, 527 KiB  
Article
On the Precise Link between Energy and Information
by Cameron Witkowski, Stephen Brown and Kevin Truong
Entropy 2024, 26(3), 203; https://doi.org/10.3390/e26030203 - 27 Feb 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2836
Abstract
We present a modified version of the Szilard engine, demonstrating that an explicit measurement procedure is entirely unnecessary for its operation. By considering our modified engine, we are able to provide a new interpretation of Landauer’s original argument for the cost of erasure. [...] Read more.
We present a modified version of the Szilard engine, demonstrating that an explicit measurement procedure is entirely unnecessary for its operation. By considering our modified engine, we are able to provide a new interpretation of Landauer’s original argument for the cost of erasure. From this view, we demonstrate that a reset operation is strictly impossible in a dynamical system with only conservative forces. Then, we prove that approaching a reset yields an unavoidable instability at the reset point. Finally, we present an original proof of Landauer’s principle that is completely independent from the Second Law of thermodynamics. Full article
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9 pages, 403 KiB  
Article
Entropy Cost of ‘Erasure’ in Physically Irreversible Processes
by Ruth E. Kastner and Andreas Schlatter
Mathematics 2024, 12(2), 206; https://doi.org/10.3390/math12020206 - 8 Jan 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3476
Abstract
A restricted form of Landauer’s principle, independent of computational considerations, is shown to hold for thermal systems by reference to the joint entropy associated with conjugate observables. It is shown that the source of the compensating entropy for irreversible physical processes is due [...] Read more.
A restricted form of Landauer’s principle, independent of computational considerations, is shown to hold for thermal systems by reference to the joint entropy associated with conjugate observables. It is shown that the source of the compensating entropy for irreversible physical processes is due to the ontological uncertainty attending values of such mutually incompatible observables, rather than due to epistemic uncertainty, as traditionally assumed in the information-theoretic approach. In particular, it is explicitly shown that erasure of logical (epistemic) information via reset operations is not equivalent to erasure of thermodynamic entropy, so that the traditional, information-theoretic form of Landauer’s principle is not supported by the physics. A further implication of the analysis is that, in principle, there can be no Maxwell’s Demon in the real world. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section E4: Mathematical Physics)
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19 pages, 834 KiB  
Article
ATP-Dependent Mismatch Recognition in DNA Replication Mismatch Repair
by Nianqin Zhang and Yongjun Zhang
Quantum Rep. 2023, 5(3), 565-583; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum5030037 - 21 Aug 2023
Viewed by 2970
Abstract
Mismatch repair is a critical step in DNA replication that occurs after base selection and proofreading, significantly increasing fidelity. However, the mechanism of mismatch recognition has not been established for any repair enzyme. Speculations in this area mainly focus on exploiting thermodynamic equilibrium [...] Read more.
Mismatch repair is a critical step in DNA replication that occurs after base selection and proofreading, significantly increasing fidelity. However, the mechanism of mismatch recognition has not been established for any repair enzyme. Speculations in this area mainly focus on exploiting thermodynamic equilibrium and free energy. Nevertheless, non-equilibrium processes may play a more significant role in enhancing mismatch recognition accuracy by utilizing adenosine triphosphate (ATP). This study aimed to investigate this possibility. Considering our limited knowledge of actual mismatch repair enzymes, we proposed a hypothetical enzyme that operates as a quantum system with three discrete energy levels. When the enzyme is raised to its highest energy level, a quantum transition occurs, leading to one of two low-energy levels representing potential recognition outcomes: a correct match or a mismatch. The probabilities of the two outcomes are exponentially different, determined by the energy gap between the two low energy levels. By flipping the energy gap, discrimination between mismatches and correct matches can be achieved. Within a framework that combines quantum mechanics with thermodynamics, we established a relationship between energy cost and the recognition error. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Quantum Biology)
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13 pages, 414 KiB  
Article
N-States Continuous Maxwell Demon
by Paul Raux and Felix Ritort
Entropy 2023, 25(2), 321; https://doi.org/10.3390/e25020321 - 9 Feb 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1881
Abstract
Maxwell’s demon is a famous thought experiment and a paradigm of the thermodynamics of information. It is related to Szilard’s engine, a two-state information-to-work conversion device in which the demon performs single measurements and extracts work depending on the state measurement outcome. A [...] Read more.
Maxwell’s demon is a famous thought experiment and a paradigm of the thermodynamics of information. It is related to Szilard’s engine, a two-state information-to-work conversion device in which the demon performs single measurements and extracts work depending on the state measurement outcome. A variant of these models, the continuous Maxwell demon (CMD), was recently introduced by Ribezzi-Crivellari and Ritort where work was extracted after multiple repeated measurements every time that τ is in a two-state system. The CMD was able to extract unbounded amounts of work at the cost of an unbounded amount of information storage. In this work, we built a generalization of the CMD to the N-state case. We obtained generalized analytical expressions for the average work extracted and the information content. We show that the second law inequality for information-to-work conversion is fulfilled. We illustrate the results for N-states with uniform transition rates and for the N = 3 case. Full article
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16 pages, 1935 KiB  
Article
Measurement-Based Quantum Thermal Machines with Feedback Control
by Bibek Bhandari, Robert Czupryniak, Paolo Andrea Erdman and Andrew N. Jordan
Entropy 2023, 25(2), 204; https://doi.org/10.3390/e25020204 - 20 Jan 2023
Cited by 12 | Viewed by 4245
Abstract
We investigated coupled-qubit-based thermal machines powered by quantum measurements and feedback. We considered two different versions of the machine: (1) a quantum Maxwell’s demon, where the coupled-qubit system is connected to a detachable single shared bath, and (2) a measurement-assisted refrigerator, where the [...] Read more.
We investigated coupled-qubit-based thermal machines powered by quantum measurements and feedback. We considered two different versions of the machine: (1) a quantum Maxwell’s demon, where the coupled-qubit system is connected to a detachable single shared bath, and (2) a measurement-assisted refrigerator, where the coupled-qubit system is in contact with a hot and cold bath. In the quantum Maxwell’s demon case, we discuss both discrete and continuous measurements. We found that the power output from a single qubit-based device can be improved by coupling it to the second qubit. We further found that the simultaneous measurement of both qubits can produce higher net heat extraction compared to two setups operated in parallel where only single-qubit measurements are performed. In the refrigerator case, we used continuous measurement and unitary operations to power the coupled-qubit-based refrigerator. We found that the cooling power of a refrigerator operated with swap operations can be enhanced by performing suitable measurements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Thermodynamics in Quantum and Mesoscopic Systems)
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8 pages, 1127 KiB  
Proceeding Paper
Maxwell’s Demon and Information Theory in Market Efficiency: A Brillouin’s Perspective
by Xavier Brouty and Matthieu Garcin
Phys. Sci. Forum 2022, 5(1), 23; https://doi.org/10.3390/psf2022005023 - 12 Dec 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2271
Abstract
By using Brillouin’s perspective on Maxwell’s demon, we determine a new way to describe investor behaviors in financial markets. The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) in its strong form states that all information in the market, public or private, is accounted for in the [...] Read more.
By using Brillouin’s perspective on Maxwell’s demon, we determine a new way to describe investor behaviors in financial markets. The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) in its strong form states that all information in the market, public or private, is accounted for in the stock price. By simulations in an agent-based model, we show that an informed investor using alternative data, correlated to the time series of prices of a financial asset, is able to act as a Maxwell’s demon on financial markets. They are then able to perform statistical arbitrage consistently with the adaptive market hypothesis (AMH). A new statistical test of market efficiency provides some insight into the impact of the demon on the market. This test determines the amount of information contained in the series, using quantities which are widespread in information theory such as Shannon’s entropy. As in Brillouin’s perspective, we observe a cycle: Negentropy->Information->Negentropy. This cycle proves the implication of the investor depicted as a Maxwell’s demon in the market with the knowledge of alternative data. Full article
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28 pages, 4288 KiB  
Review
Verification of Information Thermodynamics in a Trapped Ion System
by Lei-Lei Yan, Lv-Yun Wang, Shi-Lei Su, Fei Zhou and Mang Feng
Entropy 2022, 24(6), 813; https://doi.org/10.3390/e24060813 - 11 Jun 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 6282
Abstract
Information thermodynamics has developed rapidly over past years, and the trapped ions, as a controllable quantum system, have demonstrated feasibility to experimentally verify the theoretical predictions in the information thermodynamics. Here, we address some representative theories of information thermodynamics, such as the quantum [...] Read more.
Information thermodynamics has developed rapidly over past years, and the trapped ions, as a controllable quantum system, have demonstrated feasibility to experimentally verify the theoretical predictions in the information thermodynamics. Here, we address some representative theories of information thermodynamics, such as the quantum Landauer principle, information equality based on the two-point measurement, information-theoretical bound of irreversibility, and speed limit restrained by the entropy production of system, and review their experimental demonstration in the trapped ion system. In these schemes, the typical physical processes, such as the entropy flow, energy transfer, and information flow, build the connection between thermodynamic processes and information variation. We then elucidate the concrete quantum control strategies to simulate these processes by using quantum operators and the decay paths in the trapped-ion system. Based on them, some significantly dynamical processes in the trapped ion system to realize the newly proposed information-thermodynamic models is reviewed. Although only some latest experimental results of information thermodynamics with a single trapped-ion quantum system are reviewed here, we expect to find more exploration in the future with more ions involved in the experimental systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Certification and Verification of Quantum Systems)
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3 pages, 171 KiB  
Proceeding Paper
How Information Creates Its Observer: Emergence of the Information Observer with Regularities
by Vladimir S. Lerner and Malcolm Dean
Proceedings 2022, 81(1), 77; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2022081077 - 24 Mar 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1488
Abstract
Vladimir Lerner’s Information Macrodynamic (IMD) formalism is the first full application of John Archibald Wheeler’s “It from Bit” approach to physical Information processes. The IMD formalism accounts for the evolution of Information physics from quantum to classical regimes, showing how intelligence and Wheeler’s [...] Read more.
Vladimir Lerner’s Information Macrodynamic (IMD) formalism is the first full application of John Archibald Wheeler’s “It from Bit” approach to physical Information processes. The IMD formalism accounts for the evolution of Information physics from quantum to classical regimes, showing how intelligence and Wheeler’s Observer-Participator are naturally emergent. Distinct from “digital physics” or simple coding-decoding schemes, the IMD formalism presents a continuous step-by-step physics of natural Information processes, from the first distinction to the emergence of the self-aware Information Observer. Full article
17 pages, 517 KiB  
Article
Hidden Dissipation and Irreversibility in Maxwell’s Demon
by Paul W. Fontana
Entropy 2022, 24(1), 93; https://doi.org/10.3390/e24010093 - 6 Jan 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2761
Abstract
Maxwell’s demon is an entity in a 150-year-old thought experiment that paradoxically appears to violate the second law of thermodynamics by reducing entropy without doing work. It has increasingly practical implications as advances in nanomachinery produce devices that push the thermodynamic limits imposed [...] Read more.
Maxwell’s demon is an entity in a 150-year-old thought experiment that paradoxically appears to violate the second law of thermodynamics by reducing entropy without doing work. It has increasingly practical implications as advances in nanomachinery produce devices that push the thermodynamic limits imposed by the second law. A well-known explanation claiming that information erasure restores second law compliance fails to resolve the paradox because it assumes the second law a priori, and does not predict irreversibility. Instead, a purely mechanical resolution that does not require information theory is presented. The transport fluxes of mass, momentum, and energy involved in the demon’s operation are analyzed and show that they imply “hidden” external work and dissipation. Computing the dissipation leads to a new lower bound on entropy production by the demon. It is strictly positive in all nontrivial cases, providing a more stringent limit than the second law and implying intrinsic thermodynamic irreversibility. The thermodynamic irreversibility is linked with mechanical irreversibility resulting from the spatial asymmetry of the demon’s speed selection criteria, indicating one mechanism by which macroscopic irreversibility may emerge from microscopic dynamics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Thermodynamics)
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10 pages, 439 KiB  
Article
Battery Charging in Collision Models with Bayesian Risk Strategies
by Gabriel T. Landi
Entropy 2021, 23(12), 1627; https://doi.org/10.3390/e23121627 - 2 Dec 2021
Cited by 23 | Viewed by 3050
Abstract
We constructed a collision model where measurements in the system, together with a Bayesian decision rule, are used to classify the incoming ancillas as having either high or low ergotropy (maximum extractable work). The former are allowed to leave, while the latter are [...] Read more.
We constructed a collision model where measurements in the system, together with a Bayesian decision rule, are used to classify the incoming ancillas as having either high or low ergotropy (maximum extractable work). The former are allowed to leave, while the latter are redirected for further processing, aimed at increasing their ergotropy further. The ancillas play the role of a quantum battery, and the collision model, therefore, implements a Maxwell demon. To make the process autonomous and with a well-defined limit cycle, the information collected by the demon is reset after each collision by means of a cold heat bath. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quantum Collision Models)
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22 pages, 2327 KiB  
Article
Conditional Action and Imperfect Erasure of Qubits
by Heinz-Jürgen Schmidt
Entropy 2021, 23(3), 289; https://doi.org/10.3390/e23030289 - 26 Feb 2021
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2365
Abstract
We consider state changes in quantum theory due to “conditional action” and relate these to the discussion of entropy decrease due to interventions of “intelligent beings” and the principles of Szilard and Landauer/Bennett. The mathematical theory of conditional actions is a special case [...] Read more.
We consider state changes in quantum theory due to “conditional action” and relate these to the discussion of entropy decrease due to interventions of “intelligent beings” and the principles of Szilard and Landauer/Bennett. The mathematical theory of conditional actions is a special case of the theory of “instruments”, which describes changes of state due to general measurements and will therefore be briefly outlined in the present paper. As a detailed example, we consider the imperfect erasure of a qubit that can also be viewed as a conditional action and will be realized by the coupling of a spin to another small spin system in its ground state. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Physical Information and the Physical Foundations of Computation)
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