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Maxwell's Demon is the name of a creature thought up in 1867 by the Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell as part of a thought experiment meant to illustrate the Second law of Thermodynamics. This law forbids (among other things) that two bodies of equal temperature brought in contact with each other and isolated from the rest of the Universe, evolve to a state in which one of the two has a significantly higher temperature than the other. The second law is also expressed as the claim that entropy never decreases.

In Maxwell's thought experiment, two containers, A and B, filled with the same gas at equal temperatures are placed next to each other. A little 'demon' guards a trapdoor between the two containers, observing the molecules on both sides. Whenever a faster-than-average molecule from A flies towards the trapdoor, he opens it, and the molecule will move from A to B. Then he waits until a slower-than-average molecule from B comes flying towards the trapdoor, which he opens again, letting the molecule through to A. Thus, the average speed of the molecules in B increases and that in A decreases. But since average molecular speed corresponds to temperature, this means that the temperature in B increases and that in A decreases, which is a violation of the second law of thermodynamics.

The selection of the name " Demon" (there were other possibilities) probably comes from the Greek "Daemon" which means "captious spirit". Some others say that, it probably comes from the fact that the name was used in Britain, though unknown in the US, for a form of solitaire. Putting fast molecules all on one stack and slow ones on the other is comparable with putting red cards atop black, and vice versa, a simple repetetive process.


1 A short history of Maxwell's Demon

In 1867, in a letter to his friend P.G. Tate, Maxwell introduced a 'finite being' with the power to exploit the differences in molecular speed which exist in any gas. By opening and closing a frictionless trapdoor between two containers of gas, depending on the speed of approaching molecules, this being could create a temperature difference and break the second law of thermodynamics. Maxwell concluded:

Or in short if the heat is the motion of finite portions of matter and if we can apply tools to such portions of matter so as to deal with them separately, then we can take advantage of the different motion of different proportions to restore a uniform hot system to unequal temperatures or to motions of large masses.

This finite being, which William Thomson (Baron Kelvin) later dubbed 'demon', was supposed to elucidate the second law of thermodynamics by showing it had only 'statistical certainty'.

The twentieth century turned out to be an eventful epoch for Maxwell’s Demon. Started as a helpful thought experiment, before long it was perceived as a threat to a beloved bulwark of physical truth. The second law had to be protected against the malicious attempts of the infernal rascal to violate it; the lofty foundations of thermodynamics had to be secured once and for all by providing a definite and unassailable proof of the demon’s non-existence. Thus began the exorcist tradition.

The history of exorcism can be divided into three main phases, in which thermal fluctuations, measurement and erasure of information were the consecutive notions thought to contain the key to any successful exorcism. The protagonist exorcists of every phase naturally saw the earlier attempts as well-meant but insufficient, and their own pet idea as the final piece of the puzzle, which at last made everything fit together and had the power to banish the demon for all eternity. Because the erasure-type exorcism is nowadays the predominant position among Maxwell’s Demon scholars, the tale which displays the history of exorcism as one of gradual improvement has become somewhat of an orthodoxy. But the debate rages on, and the past fifteen years have seen a veritable host of scholarly publications on the demon.



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