In 1961, Rolf Landauer argued that the erasure of information is a dissipative process. A minimal quantity of heat, proportional to the thermal energy and called the Landauer bound, is necessarily produced when a classical bit of information is deleted. A direct consequence of this logically irreversible transformation is that the entropy of the environment increases by a finite amount. Despite its fundamental importance for information theory and computer science, the erasure principle has not been verified experimentally so far, the main obstacle being the difficulty of doing single-particle experiments in the low-dissipation regime. Here we experimentally show the existence of the Landauer bound in a generic model of a one-bit memory. Using a system of a single colloidal particle trapped in a modulated double-well potential, we establish that the mean dissipated heat saturates at the Landauer bound in the limit of long erasure cycles. This result demonstrates the intimate link between information theory and thermodynamics. It further highlights the ultimate physical limit of irreversible computation.
A fundamental and intrinsic property of any device or natural system is its relaxation
time relax, which is the time it takes to return to equilibrium after the sudden
change of a control parameter [1].
Reducing τrelax, is frequently necessary, and
is often obtained by a complex feedback process. To overcome the limitations of
such an approach, alternative methods based on driving have been recently
demonstrated [2, 3], for isolated quantum and classical systems [4–9]. Their extension to open systems in contact with a thermostat is
a stumbling block for applications. Here, we design a protocol, named Engineered
Swift Equilibration (ESE), that shortcuts time-consuming relaxations, and we
apply it to a Brownian particle trapped in an optical potential whose properties
can be controlled in time. We implement the process experimentally, showing that
it allows the system to reach equilibrium times faster than the natural
equilibration rate. We also estimate the increase of the dissipated energy
needed to get such a time reduction. The method paves the way for applications
in micro and nano devices, where the reduction of operation time represents as
substantial a challenge as miniaturization [10].
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