When Information Battles Entropy
In 1867, physicist James Clerk Maxwell imagined a tiny intelligent being—a "demon"—that could apparently violate the sacred Second Law of Thermodynamics. This paradox remained unresolved for over a century.
This creates a temperature difference from nothing—violating the Second Law which says entropy (disorder) must always increase. The demon appears to create order from chaos without doing any work!
Click the door to open/close it. Try to sort molecules by speed! Fast (red) molecules to the right, slow (blue) to the left.
For a century, physicists couldn't find the flaw. Then came the breakthrough realization: information itself has physical consequences.
The demon must observe each molecule to know its speed. This measurement process itself generates entropy, compensating for the entropy decrease in the gas.
To operate, the demon must store information about molecules. When memory fills up, erasing it produces heat: at least kT ln(2) of energy per bit erased. This is Landauer's Principle.
The demon's memory must eventually be erased to continue operating. This erasure is irreversible and increases entropy, saving the Second Law.
Physicists at École Normale Supérieure built a real Maxwell's demon using a tiny bead. They measured the exact entropy increase from information erasure—matching Landauer's prediction!
James Clerk Maxwell proposes the thought experiment in a letter to Peter Tait
William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) coins the term "Maxwell's Demon"
Leo Szilard analyzes the demon from an information theory perspective
Rolf Landauer proves that erasing information has a thermodynamic cost
Charles Bennett shows the demon's memory erasure is the key entropy source
Experimental verification of Landauer's principle using a real "demon"
Maxwell's Demon reveals one of the deepest truths in physics: information is physical. It has mass (via E=mc²), it takes up space, and it obeys thermodynamic laws.
This connection underlies everything from quantum computing to black hole physics. When Hawking showed black holes must radiate, he was grappling with the same question: what happens to the information that falls in? The answer led to the holographic principle—the idea that information about a volume is encoded on its boundary.
Maxwell's little thought experiment from 1867 turned out to be the first glimpse of information physics.
Landauer's limit sets the ultimate energy efficiency for computers. Current processors use about a million times more energy than this minimum!
Reversible quantum gates don't erase information, potentially achieving near-Landauer efficiency. The demon helped inspire quantum information theory.
Biological motors like ATP synthase operate at the nanoscale where thermal fluctuations dominate—similar conditions to Maxwell's thought experiment.
Researchers have built "information engines" that convert information into useful work, demonstrating the deep link between information and energy.