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Information Dynamics

In Classical and Quantum Systems

Thomas Dittrich

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ca. 80,24
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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik / Theoretische Physik

Beschreibung

This wide-ranging book introduces information as a key concept not only in physics, from quantum mechanics to thermodynamics, but also in the neighboring sciences and in the humanities. The central part analyzes dynamical processes as manifestations of information flows between microscopic and macroscopic scales and between systems and their environment. Quantum mechanics is interpreted as a reconstruction of mechanics based on fundamental limitations of information processing on the smallest scales. These become particularly manifest in quantum chaos and in quantum computing. Covering subjects such as causality, prediction, undecidability, chaos, and quantum randomness, the book also provides an information-theoretical view of predictability.

More than 180 illustrations visualize the concepts and arguments. The book takes inspiration from the author's graduate-level topical lecture but is also well suited for undergraduate studies and is a valuableresource for researchers and professionals.


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Schlagwörter

Chaos theory, Foundations of information, Dynamics of information, Role of information in living systems, Quantum information, Second law of thermodynamics, Entropy flow, Irreversible processes, Non-equilibrium thermodynamics, Information and randomness