The Holographic Principle
Image Credit: Caltech
Explanation: Is this picture worth a thousand words? According to the
Holographic Principle, the most information you can get from this image is about 3 x
1065 bits for a normal sized computer monitor. The
Holographic Principle, yet unproven, states that there is a maximum amount of information content held by regions adjacent to any surface. Therefore,
counter-intuitively, the information content inside a room depends not on the volume of the room but on the area of the bounding walls. The principle derives from the idea that the
Planck length, the length scale where
quantum mechanics begins to dominate
classical gravity, is one side of an area that can hold only
about one bit of information. The limit was
first postulated by physicist
Gerard 't Hooft in 1993. It can arise from generalizations from seemingly
distant speculation that the information held by a
black hole is determined not by its enclosed volume but by the surface area of its
event horizon. The term "
holographic" arises from a
hologram analogy where three-dimension images are created by projecting light though a flat screen. Beware, other people looking at the
featured image may not claim to see 3 x 10
65 bits -- they might claim to
see a
teapot.
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