Article Image

IPFS News Link • Science, Medicine and Technology

Quantum Entanglement Means Computers Could Cool Themselves By Deleting Information

• Clay Dillow via PopSci.com

It’s common empirical knowledge that computing generates heat--go ahead, touch the bottom of your MacBook--but a new paper in the journal Nature claims that it doesn’t have to. In fact, under the right conditions, theoretical physicists say that deleting data can actually produce negative heat--that is, it can have a cooling effect. That’s right, this is a quantum mechanics post. Exit now if you don’t want a headache to start the weekend.

The phenomenon here has to do with basic rules about knowledge and the lack of knowledge, and it is rooted firmly in the definition of entropy and how information theory, thermodynamics, and quantum theory define it differently (and also in the same way). But the idea is thus: If it were technologically possible (and it should be, perhaps someday) to quantum-mechanically entangle the bits to be deleted with an observer, the observer could actually withdraw heat from the system while deleting the bits.

This is where the headaches start, and I’m not going to pretend to understand the nuts and bolts here. But conceptually, it comes down to knowledge. In information theory, entropy describes information density. In thermodynamics, entropy describes disorder in systems. What this new paper claims to prove is that in both cases, entropy basically describes a lack of knowledge.

An object doesn’t really possess entropy, but rather its entropy is dependent on the observer. So the idea is that if there are two observers deleting data from a memory, and one observer has more knowledge of the data, that observer will perceive the memory has lower entropy, and thus can delete it with less energy expenditure.

 

Agorist Hosting