Information content in electromagnetic or gravitational waves

Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
3 replies · 1K views
gianeshwar
Messages
225
Reaction score
14
TL;DR
Information scenerio in electromagnetic and gravitational waves. Conditions under which information content is lost.
Electromagnetic or gravitational wave carries energy and momentum from place to place as,I understand.Does it imply that such waves only can carry information and if their energy gets dissipated as heat, the information contained is lost.
Is this information content is to be decoded by human?
If there was no one to observe, was there any information?
Please discuss.
 
on Phys.org
Thank you very much anorlunda for valuable article. Will study it with care.
 
Reply
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: berkeman
Of course, if all you measure is the total energy of a wave in terms of heat produced by it in a calorimeter all you have as information is this energy. Thermal equilibrium is the state of minimal information (in the sense of the Shannon-Jaynes interpretation of entropy as a measure for the missing information, which in the equilibrium state is maximal).

If you have of course, say, the complete spectral information of your wave signal you can learn a lot from it. E.g., from the gravitational-wave signals due to merging neutron stars (or a black-hole neutron-star merger) you can learn a lot about the equation of state of the strongly interacting matter making up the neutron star(s).
 
Reply
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: gianeshwar