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The formulation for R accounts for a single molecular machine either gaining
or losing information as it cycles through its operations [Schneider, 1991].
A similar formula,
[Hobson, 1971,Schneider & Stormo, 1989] gives the maximum information
an observer could gain by observing a system.
I is always zero or positive [Hobson, 1971].
If we were to start a molecular machine
in some state A, and we later observe it in another state B
(
,
for some i)
then
IAB > 0.
If the machine returns to A, then
IBA > 0,
so
IAB + IBA > 0,
meaning that the observer learned the details of how
the machine performed this cycle.
But the machine itself is in the same state as it began,
so it cannot have gained any information, just as a computer
memory does not gain any information if we fill it with data and then
remove the data again.
Thus only a path independent function of state, such as R,
is appropriate to use for the information a single molecular machine gains
during its operation.
External observers and the measurements they may make are not relevant to
the problem.
Next: How Uncertainty Decreases Define
Up: Theory of Molecular Machines.
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Tom Schneider
1999-12-24