Maxwell's Demon Gets Real
JoeMerchant writes:
The thorny thought experiment has been turned into a real experiment.
The universe bets on disorder. Imagine, for example, dropping a thimbleful of red dye into a swimming pool. All of those dye molecules are going to slowly spread throughout the water. Physicists quantify this tendency to spread by counting the number of possible ways the dye molecules can be arranged. There's one possible state where the molecules are crowded into the thimble. There's another where, say, the molecules settle in a tidy clump at the pool's bottom. But there are uncountable billions of permutations where the molecules spread out in different ways throughout the water. If the universe chooses from all the possible states at random, you can bet that it's going to end up with one of the vast set of disordered possibilities.
Seen in this way, the inexorable rise in entropy, or disorder, as quantified by the second law of thermodynamics, takes on an almost mathematical certainty. So of course physicists are constantly trying to break it.
One almost did. A thought experiment devised by the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell in 1867 stumped scientists for 115 years. And even after a solution was found, physicists have continued to use "Maxwell's demon" to push the laws of the universe to their limits.
[...] In 1982, the American physicist Charles Bennett put the pieces of the puzzle together. He realized that Maxwell's demon was at core an information-processing machine: It needed to record and store information about individual particles in order to decide when to open and close the door. Periodically it would need to erase this information. According to Landauer's erasure principle, the rise in entropy from the erasure would more than compensate for the decrease in entropy caused by the sorting of the particles. "You need to pay," said Gonzalo Manzano, a physicist at the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information in Vienna. The demon's need to make room for more information inexorably led to a net increase in disorder.
Then in the 21st century, with the thought experiment solved, the real experiments began. "The most important development is we can now realize Maxwell's demon in laboratories," said Sagawa.
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