- Limits to computation
There are several physical and practical limits to the amount of
computation ordata storage that can be performed with a given amount of mass, volume, or energy:* The
Bekenstein bound limits the amount of information that can be stored within a spherical volume to the entropy of a black hole with the same surface area.
* The temperature of thecosmic microwave background radiation gives a practical lower limit to the energy consumed to perform computation of approximately 4"kT" per state change, where "T" is the temperature of the background (about 3kelvin s), and "k" is theBoltzmann constant . While a device could be cooled to operate below this temperature, the energy expended by the cooling would offset the benefit of the lower operating temperature.Several methods have been proposed for producing computing devices or data storage devices that approach physical and practical limits:
* AMatrioshka Brain is a set of concentricDyson sphere s that attempts to capture as much usable energy as possible from the host star, to make it available for computation.
* A colddegenerate star could conceivably be used as a giant data storage device, by carefully perturbing it to various excited states, in the same manner as an atom or quantum well used for these purposes. Such a star would have to be artificially constructed, as no natural degenerate stars will cool to this temperature for an extremely long time. It is also possible thatnucleon s on the surface ofneutron star s could form complex "molecules" [http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/N/neutronstarlife.html] which some have suggested might be used for computing purposes [http://web.archive.org/web/20041025030505/http://www.cs.usu.edu/~degaris/essays/femtotech.html] , creating a type ofcomputronium based onfemtotechnology which would be faster and denser than computronium based onnanotechnology .
* It may be possible to useblack hole as a data storage and/or computing device, if a practical mechanism for extraction of contained information can be found. Such extraction may in principle to be possible (Stephen Hawking 's proposed resolution to theblack hole information paradox ). This would achieve storage density exactly equal to theBekenstein Bound . The scientistSeth Lloyd calculated the computational abilities of an "ultimate laptop" formed by compressing a kilogram of matter into a black hole of radius 1.485 x 10-27 meters, concluding that it would only last about 10-19 seconds before evaporating due toHawking radiation , but that during this brief time it could compute at a rate of about 5 x 1050 operations per second, ultimately performing about 1032 operations on 1016 bits. Lloyd notes that "Interestingly, although this hypothetical computation is performed at ultra-high densities and speeds, the total number of bits available to be processed is not far from the number available to current computers operating in more familiar surroundings." [http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/9908043]None of these methods are expected to be practical in the near future.
References
#cite journal
ref = Lloyd2000
author = Lloyd, S.
date =2000-08-31
title = Ultimate physical limits to computation
journal = Nature
volume = 406
pages = 1047–1054
url = http://puhep1.princeton.edu/~mcdonald/examples/QM/lloyd_nature_406_1047_00.pdf
format = PDF
doi = 10.1038/35023282
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