Thursday, August 9, 2012

1208.1561 (Kurt Jacobs)

Quantum measurement and the first law of thermodynamics: the energy cost
of measurement is the work value of the acquired information
   [PDF]

Kurt Jacobs
The energy cost of measurement is an interesting fundamental question, and may have profound implications for quantum technologies. In the context of Maxwell's demon, it is often stated that measurement has no minimum energy cost, while information has a work value, even though these statements can appear contradictory. However, as we elucidate, these statements do no refer to the cost paid by the measuring device. Here we show that it is only when a measuring device has access to a zero temperature reservoir - that is, never - that the measurement requires no energy. All real measuring devices pay the cost that a heat engine pays to obtain the work value of the information they acquire.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1208.1561

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