Minimal energy requirements in communication

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Abstract

The literature describing the energy needs for a communications channel has been dominated by analyses of linear electromagnetic transmission, often without awareness that this is a special case. This case leads to the conclusion that an amount of energy equal to kTIn 2, where kT is the thermal noise per unit bandwidth, is needed to transmit a bit, and more if quantized channels are used with photon energies hv > kT. Alternative communication methods are proposed to show that there is no unavoidable minimal energy requirement per transmitted bit. These methods are invoked as part of an analysis of ultimate limits and not as practical procedures.

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APA

Landauer, R. (1996). Minimal energy requirements in communication. Science, 272(5270), 1914–1918. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.272.5270.1914

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