Bremermann's limit provides the ultimate constraint on the speed of computation, establishing a ceiling that Dyson's intelligent beings would operate far beneath. The limit states the maximum rate of computation that can be achieved by any self-contained system of a given mass, based on the mass-energy equivalence and the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. The limit is given by: :R_{max} = \frac{c^2}{h} \approx 1.356 \times 10^{50} \text{ bits per second per kilogram} where: • c is the
speed of light, • h is Planck's constant. This can be derived from the uncertainty principle for energy and time, \Delta E \Delta t \ge \frac{\hbar}{2}, and Einstein's mass-energy equivalence, E=mc^2. A system of mass m has a maximum energy of mc^2, which sets the ultimate limit on the energy uncertainty \Delta E. The minimum time \Delta t to transition to a new distinguishable state (equivalent to one computational operation) is therefore proportional to h/\Delta E. In the context of Dyson's eternal intelligence, Bremermann's limit represents the absolute fastest that a thought could possibly be processed by a brain or computer of a given mass. However, the strategy for eternal survival requires the exact opposite: deliberately slowing down computation to infinitesimal speeds to conserve energy, thus always remaining far from this ultimate physical limit. Dyson noted that "in an accelerated universe everything is different". A key assumption in Dyson's original proposal is that the universe will continue to cool down indefinitely, allowing the ambient temperature T to approach zero. However, this assumption is challenged by the observed accelerated expansion of the universe, which is attributed to a positive
cosmological constant, \Lambda. In such a
de Sitter-like universe, there is a fundamental lower limit to the temperature that any observer can experience. This minimum temperature is known as the
Gibbons-Hawking temperature, which arises from the thermal radiation produced by the cosmological event horizon. The vacuum state in this spacetime is the
Bunch-Davies vacuum, and for an accelerating observer, this vacuum appears as a thermal bath with a temperature proportional to the acceleration. As the universe continues its accelerated expansion, the temperature will asymptotically approach a non-zero value: :T_{min} = \frac{\hbar c}{2\pi k_B R_h} = \frac{\hbar}{2\pi k_B} \sqrt{\frac{\Lambda c^2}{3}} where R_h is the radius of the cosmological event horizon. Because the temperature never falls below this minimum, Landauer's principle implies a permanent, non-zero minimum energy cost for erasing a bit of information. This establishes a finite lower bound on the energy required for any computational thought, \Delta E_{thought} > Q \cdot k_B T_{min} \ln(2). Consequently, with only a finite initial store of energy, only a finite number of thoughts can ever be processed. This "thermal death" of the universe prevents the infinite hibernation and computation trick from working, thus rendering Dyson's eternal intelligence scenario impossible in a universe with a positive cosmological constant. == Reversible computing ==