Dependence of dissipation on the initial distribution over states

We analyze how the amount of work dissipated by a fixed nonequilibrium process depends on the initial distribution over states. Specifically, we compare the amount of dissipation when the process is used with some specified initial distribution to the minimal amount of dissipation possible for any i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of statistical mechanics Vol. 2017; no. 8; pp. 83202 - 83221
Main Authors Kolchinsky, Artemy, Wolpert, David H
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IOP Publishing and SISSA 16.08.2017
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Summary:We analyze how the amount of work dissipated by a fixed nonequilibrium process depends on the initial distribution over states. Specifically, we compare the amount of dissipation when the process is used with some specified initial distribution to the minimal amount of dissipation possible for any initial distribution. We show that the difference between those two amounts of dissipation is given by a simple information-theoretic function that depends only on the initial and final state distributions. Crucially, this difference is independent of the details of the process relating those distributions. We then consider how dissipation depends on the initial distribution for a 'computer', i.e. a nonequilibrium process whose dynamics over coarse-grained macrostates implement some desired input-output map. We show that our results still apply when stated in terms of distributions over the computer's coarse-grained macrostates. This can be viewed as a novel thermodynamic cost of computation, reflecting changes in the distribution over inputs rather than the logical dynamics of the computation.
Bibliography:JSTAT_026P_0517
ISSN:1742-5468
1742-5468
DOI:10.1088/1742-5468/aa7ee1