Thermodynamically-Efficient Local Computation and the
Inefficiency of Quantum Memory Compression

Samuel P. Loomis and James P. Crutchfield

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

ABSTRACT: Modularity dissipation identifies how locally-implemented computation entails costs beyond those required by Landauer's bound on thermodynamic computing. We establish a general theorem for efficient local computation, giving the necessary and sufficient conditions for a local operation to have zero modularity cost. Applied to thermodynamically-generating stochastic processes it confirms a conjecture that classical generators are efficient if and only if they satisfy retrodiction, which places minimal memory requirements on the generator. This extends immediately to quantum computation: Any quantum simulator that employs quantum memory compression cannot be thermodynamically efficient.


Samuel P. Loomis and James P. Crutchfield, “Thermodynamically-Efficient Local Computation and the Inefficiency of Quantum Memory Compression”, Physical Review Research 2:2 (2020) 023039.
doi:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.023039.
[pdf]

arxiv.org:2001.02258 [quant-ph].