Space Travel News
TIME AND SPACE
Heat limits on communication in computers
illustration only

Heat limits on communication in computers

by Clarence Oxford
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Jan 01, 2026

Every task performed on a computer, from numerical calculations to video playback, depends on internal components exchanging information, and researchers are now quantifying the energy cost of that communication. Former SFI Graduate Fellow Abhishek Yadav, a Ph.D. scholar at the University of New Mexico, notes that communication is central to computation, yet the energy budget that devices devote to it has remained poorly understood.

Over the last decade, SFI Professor David Wolpert has led work on the thermodynamic costs of computation, focusing on the physical limits that govern how much energy information processing must consume. He argues that establishing thermodynamic bounds on the cost of communication is a critical but underexplored problem, relevant not only for computers but for communication systems that support much of modern society.

In a new study in Physical Review Research, co-authored by Yadav and Wolpert, the team analyzes the unavoidable heat released when information passes through a system, overturning earlier assumptions that communication could, in principle, be energetically free. The researchers combine ideas from computer science, communication theory, and stochastic thermodynamics, which studies real-world nonequilibrium systems such as smartphones and laptops.

Using a logical abstraction of generic communication channels, they derive the minimum heat that must be dissipated to send a single unit of information. The framework applies to artificial channels such as optical fibers and to biological pathways such as neurons transmitting signals in the brain, all of which operate in the presence of noise that can disrupt messages.

Their results show that the minimum heat dissipation is at least as large as the useful information, or mutual information, that successfully passes through the noisy channel. This link ties the physical energy cost of communication directly to how much information survives interference and reaches its destination.

The researchers then analyze a separate abstraction of how contemporary computers carry out computations to determine the minimum thermodynamic costs of encoding and decoding messages. These steps protect messages against channel noise, and the team finds that more accurate data transmission, achieved through improved encoding and decoding algorithms, necessarily increases heat dissipation inside the system.

Quantifying these lower bounds on energy costs for communication could guide the design of more energy-efficient systems. Yadav points to the von Neumann architecture used in most current computers, where communication between the CPU and memory contributes significantly to the overall energy budget, as a prime target for rethinking future designs.

According to the authors, the same physical constraints apply across all communication channels, suggesting a route to better understanding complex, energy-intensive systems that depend on signaling, from neural circuits to artificial logic hardware. Although the human brain consumes about 20 percent of the body's calories, it operates far more efficiently than artificial computers, raising questions about how natural computational systems manage the thermodynamic costs of communication.

Research Report:Minimal thermodynamic cost of communication

Related Links
Santa Fe Institute
Understanding Time and Space

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
TIME AND SPACE
Hybrid excitons speed ultrafast energy transfer at 2D organic interface
Berlin, Germany (SPX) Dec 19, 2025
Researchers from the Universities of Goettingen, Marburg, Humboldt University in Berlin, and Graz have identified a new quantum state at the interface between an organic semiconductor and a two dimensional semiconductor. They report that this state, a hybrid exciton, combines properties from both materials and enables energy transfer on femtosecond timescales, with potential applications in future solar cells and optoelectronic devices. The work appears in Nature Physics as part of efforts to better und ... read more

TIME AND SPACE
TIME AND SPACE
HiRISE camera aboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter passes 100000 image milestone

GoMars model simulates Martian dust storms to improve mission safety

Maven stays silent after routine pass behind Mars

Ancient Martian brines left bromine rich fingerprints in jarosite minerals

TIME AND SPACE
Origami style lunar rover wheel expands to climb steep caves

Sandia centrifuge campaign clears NASA VIPER rover for lunar launch

JPL puts Blue Ghost Mission 2 lunar stack through launch stress tests

Trump shifts priority to Moon mission, not Mars

TIME AND SPACE
Uranus and Neptune may be rock rich worlds

SwRI links Uranus radiation belt mystery to solar storm driven waves

Looking inside icy moons

Saturn moon mission planning shifts to flower constellation theory

TIME AND SPACE
Clues to the migration path of hot Jupiters in their orbits

Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like

Ultra hot super Earth shows dense atmosphere over magma ocean

Hidden circumbinary giant planet emerges from decade old Gemini data

TIME AND SPACE
Hydrogen from ethanol reforming mapped as aviation fuel-cell pathway

Europe's Ariane 6 rocket puts EU navigation satellites in orbit

Southern Launch to host INNOSPACE missions from South Australian spaceports

Rocket Lab completes first dedicated JAXA mission with Electron launch

TIME AND SPACE
Shenzhou 21 crew complete eight hour spacewalk outside Tiangong station

Foreign satellites ride Kinetica 1 on new CAS Space mission

Experts at Hainan symposium call for stronger global space partnership

Triple Long March launches mark record day for Chinese space program

TIME AND SPACE
Micro X ray method reads ancient meteorite impact scars

ICE-CSIC leads a pioneering study on the feasibility of asteroid mining

OSIRIS-APEX spacecraft completes Earth flyby on its journey to explore Apophis

40 000 near-Earth asteroids discovered!

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.