Identifying Functional Thermodynamics
in
Autonomous Maxwellian Ratchets

Alexander B. Boyd and James P. Crutchfield

Complexity Sciences Center
Physics Department
University of California at Davis
Davis, CA 95616

and

Dibyendu Mandal

Physics Department
University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 94720

ABSTRACT: We introduce a family of Maxwellian Demons for which correlations among information bearing degrees of freedom can be calculated exactly and in compact analytical form. This allows one to precisely determine Demon functional thermodynamic operating regimes, when previous methods either misclassify or simply fail due to approximations they invoke. This reveals that these Demons are more functional than previous candidates. They too behave either as engines, lifting a mass against gravity by extracting energy from a single heat reservoir, or as Landauer erasers, consuming external work to remove information from a sequence of binary symbols by decreasing their individual uncertainty. Going beyond these, our Demon exhibits a new functionality that erases bits not by simply decreasing individual-symbol uncertainty, but by increasing inter-bit correlations (that is, by adding temporal order) while increasing single-symbol uncertainty. In all cases, but especially in the new erasure regime, exactly accounting for informational correlations leads to tight bounds on Demon performance, expressed as a refined Second Law of Thermodynamics that relies on the Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy for dynamical processes and not on changes purely in system configurational entropy, as previously employed. We rigorously derive the refined Second Law under minimal assumptions and so it applies quite broadly—for Demons with and without memory and input sequences that are correlated or not. We note that general Maxwellian Demons readily violate previously proposed, alternative such bounds, while the current bound still holds.


Alexander B. Boyd, Dibyendu Mandal, and James P. Crutchfield, "Identifying Functional Thermodynamics in Autonomous Maxwellian Ratchets", New Journal of Physics 18 (2016) 023049.
doi:10.1088/1367-2630/18/2/023049.
[pdf] 1553 KB
Santa Fe Institute Working Paper 15-07-025.
arxiv.org:1507.01537 [cond-mat.stat-mech].