Maxwell's Demon Paradox: Solving the Puzzle Without Memory Requirements

In summary: Read MoreIn summary, the resolution for Maxwell's demon paradox is that the demon has limited memory and will eventually run out of space to store information, leading to the thermodynamically irreversible process of erasing information and increasing the entropy of the system. However, it may be possible to conduct a similar thought experiment without the need for memory by using high and low frequency waves separated by a separator with one-way filters. This raises questions about the entropy of the wave guide and its environment, and further analysis and experimentation would be necessary to determine if this violates the second law of thermodynamics.
  • #1
Deepblu
63
8
The resolution for Maxwell's demon paradox is that the demon has limited memory and the demon will eventually run out of information storage space and must begin to erase the information it has previously gathered. Erasing information is a thermodynamically irreversible process that increases the entropy of a system.

My question is we can do the same thought experiment without the requirement for any memory, here for example:

Instead of high & low energy particles + door, we can put high & low frequency waves in the box and then separate them with a separator that has high pass filter in one direction (located in the upper part of the separator), and a low pass filter in the opposite direction (located in the lower part of the separator). This way overtime low frequency waves will move to one box, and high frequency waves will move to the other box. And because the high frequency waves carry higher energy, we will end up with one box having higher energy content that the other one. No memory is needed here.

What I am missing?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Deepblu said:
a separator that has high pass filter in one direction (located in the upper part of the separator), and a low pass filter in the opposite direction (located in the lower part of the separator).
No such filters exist.
 
  • #4
Deepblu said:
The article is behind a paywall, so all I can see is the title and abstract. However, from that it does not appear to be the waveguide alone that permits this, but rather the combination of the waveguide and the cavity. So you may not be able to preferentially move a different frequency the other direction.
 
  • #5
Deepblu said:
What I am missing?

So, you have an idea to violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics. You invest one minute to write a post, and then expect experts to analyze it and tell you what you're missing? That is very inconsiderate and a borderline violation of PF rules.

The obligation is on you to think your idea through and to do some analysis, and perhaps experiments and write it up in a paper to submit for peer review.
 
  • #6
anorlunda said:
So, you have an idea to violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics. You invest one minute to write a post, and then expect experts to analyze it and tell you what you're missing? That is very inconsiderate and a borderline violation of PF rules.

The obligation is on you to think your idea through and to do some analysis, and perhaps experiments and write it up in a paper to submit for peer review.
No.. I am just here to learn.
 
  • Like
Likes Demystifier
  • #7
Dale said:
The article is behind a paywall, so all I can see is the title and abstract. However, from that it does not appear to be the waveguide alone that permits this, but rather the combination of the waveguide and the cavity. So you may not be able to preferentially move a different frequency the other direction.
I am not sure what is your point.
In the example I gave, we have 2 separate waveguides that filter waves in opposite directions.
 
  • #8
Deepblu said:
First, they say that "One-way electromagnetic waveguide modes are theoretically demonstrated" (my bolding), not that such a waveguide actually exists in the laboratory.

Second, it's possible that they made some error in their theoretical analysis (it's hard to tell without seeing the whole paper).

Third, and most important, the existence of such a waveguide is not automatically a violation of the second law. For instance, a fridge is doing something similar, in the sense that it achieves that the interior contains only "slow" low temperature molecules, while the exterior contains only "fast" high temperature molecules. Nevertheless, the total entropy of the fridge and its exterior increases, so fridge is not a Maxwell demon. Likewise, if the one-way guide works at all, it works such that the total entropy (entropy of the waves + entropy of the wave guide + entropy of their environment) increases.

So what you are missing is the entropy of the wave guide itself and its environment.
 
  • #9
Deepblu said:
The resolution for Maxwell's demon paradox is that the demon has limited memory and the demon will eventually run out of information storage space and must begin to erase the information it has previously gathered. Erasing information is a thermodynamically irreversible process that increases the entropy of a system.

My question is we can do the same thought experiment without the requirement for any memory, here for example:

Instead of high & low energy particles + door, we can put high & low frequency waves in the box and then separate them with a separator that has high pass filter in one direction (located in the upper part of the separator), and a low pass filter in the opposite direction (located in the lower part of the separator). This way overtime low frequency waves will move to one box, and high frequency waves will move to the other box. And because the high frequency waves carry higher energy, we will end up with one box having higher energy content that the other one. No memory is needed here.

What I am missing?
Suppose first that the filter is not autonomous, i.e. that you are the operator working on the filter. Each time you send a high or low frequency wave in one or another direction, you either (i) remember what you have done of (ii) forget it immediately after doing it. In the case (i) you eventually run out of your brain storage space, so eventually you must forget it which increases the entropy. In the case (ii) you increase entropy each time when you forget what you have just done. In each case, you increase entropy one way or another.

Now suppose that the filter is autonomous. Is the autonomous filter any different? No. Your brain is based on the same laws of physics as is the autonomous filter. So even without the brain, there are still some physical degrees of freedom in the filter that keep track of what happened with them during the interaction with waves. Either these degrees of freedom keep track of it permanently [which corresponds to the case (i)] or they don't [which corresponds to the case (ii)].

So what you are missing is that in the autonomous filter there is still some kind of "hidden" memory involved. If the filter interacts with the wave such that the wave suffers a change, then the filter must also suffer a change (this is related to the Newton's third law). That change in the filter is a kind of memory.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes Deepblu
  • #10
Deepblu said:
I am not sure what is your point.
In the example I gave, we have 2 separate waveguides that filter waves in opposite directions.
I don’t think that is possible. The abstract of the article certainly doesn’t make that claim.

In particular, it mentions a waveguide connecting two different cavities, and it mentions that the cavity interacts with the waveguide to produce the one way effect. So there is no indication that the effect can be reversed and some reason to believe that it cannot.

And as others have mentioned, the mere existence of such waveguides does not directly imply anything about the entropy.
 
Last edited:
  • #11
Deepblu said:
I am not sure what is your point.
In the example I gave, we have 2 separate waveguides that filter waves in opposite directions.

All of the "filters" that operate this way are basically variants of optical Faraday isolators. Consider for example a Faraday isolator or a topological insulator, where the degeneracy between the forward and the backward edge state is lifted or even something as simple as a twisted resonator setup coupled to an ensemble of Rydberg atoms (nice example: Phys. Rev. A 97, 013802 (2018), https://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.97.013802).

All of these designs have something in common: In order to create this kind of directional asymmetry, you need a system, where time-reversal symmetry is already explicitly broken locally. Most of the time, this is a consequence of a magnetic like in Faraday rotators. However, all of these kinds of symmetry breaking rely on considering the magnetic field as an external perturbation (If you included the magnet and reversed also the electron flow inside them, full time-reversal symmetry would hold again). Accordingly, employing such filters automatically means that you investigate a system that is not really a closed system and you need to consider the external part as well to get a complete picture about the entropy of the system.

For Fermions, you directly see from Kramer's theorem that every eigenstate of the system with time-reversal symmetry is twofold degenerate and therefore the filter you propose cannot be constructed for a system with time-reversal symmetry. For bosons this is a bit more complicated.
 
  • Like
Likes Dale and kith
  • #12
Cthugha said:
All of the "filters" that operate this way are basically variants of optical Faraday isolators. Consider for example a Faraday isolator or a topological insulator, where the degeneracy between the forward and the backward edge state is lifted or even something as simple as a twisted resonator setup coupled to an ensemble of Rydberg atoms (nice example: Phys. Rev. A 97, 013802 (2018), https://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.97.013802).

All of these designs have something in common: In order to create this kind of directional asymmetry, you need a system, where time-reversal symmetry is already explicitly broken locally. Most of the time, this is a consequence of a magnetic like in Faraday rotators. However, all of these kinds of symmetry breaking rely on considering the magnetic field as an external perturbation (If you included the magnet and reversed also the electron flow inside them, full time-reversal symmetry would hold again). Accordingly, employing such filters automatically means that you investigate a system that is not really a closed system and you need to consider the external part as well to get a complete picture about the entropy of the system.

For Fermions, you directly see from Kramer's theorem that every eigenstate of the system with time-reversal symmetry is twofold degenerate and therefore the filter you propose cannot be constructed for a system with time-reversal symmetry. For bosons this is a bit more complicated.
+1

You are right, I was going to comment on time asymmetry after I found this articles:
One-Way Electromagnetic Waveguide Formed at the Interface between a Plasmonic Metal under a Static Magnetic Field and a Photonic Crystal
https://web.stanford.edu/group/fan/publication/Yu_PRL_100_023902_2008.pdf

Particularly this quote from the article above: "Breaking time-reversal symmetry lifts the degeneracy at the Dirac point and creates a band gap. An edge state introduced into this gap then behaves as a one-way waveguide."

Also I found this:
https://archive.siam.org/meetings/nw10/soljacic.pdf

As I understood these theorized one way wave-guides, can only work in a system where time symmetry is broken, and thus they do not violate 2nd low of thermodynamics.
 
  • #13
Deepblu said:
As I understood these theorized one way wave-guides, can only work in a system where time symmetry is broken
There is a simple heuristic way to understand that generally. If something can move in one direction but not in the opposite one, that means that it can have the velocity
$$v=\frac{dx}{dt}$$
but not the opposite velocity
$$v'=-v=-\frac{dx}{dt}$$
The opposite velocity can be written as
$$v'=\frac{dx}{d(-t)}$$
so, loosely speaking, the inability the have the opposite velocity is the same as the inability to describe the system with the inverted time.
 
  • #14
Deepblu said:
Is this any different from a (common) waveguide isolator (or circulator), based on ferrite. (http://www.m2global.com/products/?gclid=CjwKCAjwhevaBRApEiwA7aT533N0BKGzdm3gY3ok2QlgKIwiBkdqtwrejFEbHWZ0DYXucond_k-xHxoCbz8QAvD_BwE) An isolator prevents a reflected wave getting back down the wave-guide (or co-ax) by absorbing it. That would not be what's needed here, I think.
 

What is Maxwell's Demon Paradox?

Maxwell's Demon Paradox is a thought experiment in physics that was proposed by James Clerk Maxwell in 1867. It involves a hypothetical creature, called the "demon," that is able to sort molecules in a closed system based on their speed, thus violating the second law of thermodynamics.

How does the paradox relate to the second law of thermodynamics?

The second law of thermodynamics states that the total entropy of a closed system always increases over time. The paradox arises because the demon's actions appear to decrease entropy, which goes against this law.

What is the solution to Maxwell's Demon Paradox?

The solution to the paradox involves the idea of "information entropy." This is a measure of the amount of information that is necessary to describe the state of a system. By taking into account the information required to operate the demon, it can be shown that the total entropy of the system still increases.

What role does memory play in the solution?

The solution to the paradox does not require the demon to have a memory. The demon only needs to observe and react to the molecules in real time, without storing any information about their past states.

What are the implications of the solution to Maxwell's Demon Paradox?

The solution to the paradox has important implications for our understanding of the second law of thermodynamics and the role of information in physical systems. It also has practical applications in fields such as computing and nanotechnology, where the manipulation of individual molecules is becoming increasingly important.

Similar threads

Replies
8
Views
2K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
9
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
8
Views
2K
Replies
78
Views
11K
Replies
7
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
4
Views
1K
  • Electromagnetism
Replies
2
Views
4K
Replies
9
Views
2K
Back
Top