Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction. N. David Mermin

Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction


Quantum.Computer.Science.An.Introduction.pdf
ISBN: 0521876583,9780521876582 | 237 pages | 6 Mb


Download Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction



Quantum Computer Science: An Introduction N. David Mermin
Publisher: Cambridge University Press




As quantum cryptography has been proved and tested in several experiments, this application could be introduced before the expiry of the commonly used public-key based application. Quantum scientists at IBM Research have announced major advances in quantum computing that should accelerate the creation of real, affordable, databases of unstructured data (similar to the quantum PageRank that we wrote about last year), and attempting unsolved mathematical problems. According to our Special In Essential Science IndicatorsSM from Thomson Reuters, his record includes 56 papers cited a total of 2,899 times between January 1, 2000 and April 30, 2010 in the field of Physics. The study was funded through two National Burg also plans to expand the curriculum concepts she introduced in this study into a program dedicated to increasing STEM majors at Wake Forest. This is done by combining it with the concept of quantum physics and thereby enhancing computer science, which has so far been reduced to a binary architecture, built on transistor systems. For an excellent introduction to quantum computing and the significance of IBM's breakthroughs, watch the video below — or read more about the breakthroughs at IBM. Australian researchers claim to have passed a significant milestone toward quantum computers as they said they were able to create the first qubit based on a single atom in silicon. One could think that we are still far from building a quantum computer. Hereby the theory of quantum information opens and . Research continues at a lively pace because large-scale quantum computers would far exceed the performance of classical computers, and they would have important applications in cryptanalysis because of their potential to factorize very large numbers. But Martin Laforest, a physicist at the Institute for Quantum Computing, dismisses the idea that science is a closed club. Anyway, back to the quantum computer. The results of Burg's research, "Computer Science 'Big Ideas' Play Well in Digital Sound and Music," will be published during the upcoming Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education conference, on March 9 in Denver. You might think it sounds like nonsense, but quantum mechanics has proved itself in experiment after experiment and there is no doubt in the scientific community about its correctness. But a Canadian company seems to be much closer than the scientific community would have thought.