Universal validity of the second law of information thermodynamics
Shintaro Minagawa, M. Hamed Mohammady, Kenta Sakai, Kohtaro Kato,, Francesco Buscemi

TL;DR
This paper proves that the second law of information thermodynamics universally applies to all quantum feedback and erasure protocols, regardless of measurement details, confirming its fundamental consistency with thermodynamics.
Contribution
It precisely characterizes the full range of quantum feedback control and erasure protocols compatible with the second law, extending and simplifying previous results.
Findings
Second law holds universally for quantum feedback protocols
The second law applies regardless of measurement process details
Previous assumptions are relaxed, broadening applicability
Abstract
Adiabatic measurements, followed by feedback and erasure protocols, have often been considered as a model to embody Maxwell's Demon paradox and to study the interplay between thermodynamics and information processing. Such studies have led to the conclusion, now widely accepted in the community, that Maxwell's Demon and the second law of thermodynamics can peacefully coexist because any gain provided by the demon must be offset by the cost of performing the measurement and resetting the demon's memory to its initial state. Statements of this kind are collectively referred to as second laws of information thermodynamics and have recently been extended to include quantum theoretical scenarios. However, previous studies in this direction have made several assumptions, particularly about the feedback process and the demon's memory readout, and thus arrived at statements that are not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
