Landauer's principle

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English[edit]

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Etymology[edit]

Named after German-American physicist Rolf Landauer (1927–1999), who proposed it in 1961.

Proper noun[edit]

Landauer's principle

  1. (physics, information theory) The principle that any logically irreversible manipulation of information must entail an increase in the entropy of the information-processing apparatus or its environment.
    • 2017, Momčilo Gavrilov, Experiments on the Thermodynamics of Information Processing, Springer, page 72:
      Landauer's principle remained untested for over fifty years.
    • 2018, Michael P. Frank, Physical Foundations of Landauer's Principle, Jarkko Kari, Irek Ulidowski (editors), Reversible Computation: 10th International Conference, Proceedings, Springer, LNCS, page 5,
      Thus, the usual arguments for Landauer's Principle and reversible computing that do not address this case are overly simplistic; later, we will discuss how to generalize and repair them.
    • 2022, Philipp Strasberg, Quantum Stochastic Thermodynamics, Oxford University Press, page 53:
      Equation (2.27) is often referred to as Landauer's principle.
      In retrospect, one could object that Landauer's principle is a mere tautology. If one accepts the notion of Shannon entropy as non-equilibrium thermodynamic entropy, then Landauer's principle is nothing but the second law (2.24) of non-equilibrium thermodynamics applied to a special situation.

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