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Understanding Quantum Computing Basics

- Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics principles to process information on quantum (atomic and subatomic) levels, allowing qubits to exist in superposition and perform multiple computations in parallel. - A qubit can represent a 1, 0, or combination of both simultaneously, exponentially increasing computing power compared to classical bits. However, measurement causes qubits to collapse to a single state. - While the concept originated in the 1950s, key developments included Deutsch proposing a quantum computer in 1984, Shor devising an algorithm in 1994, and teams building small 2-qubit and 4-qubit computers in the late 1990s and 2000s. Research continues on scaling challenges.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views7 pages

Understanding Quantum Computing Basics

- Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics principles to process information on quantum (atomic and subatomic) levels, allowing qubits to exist in superposition and perform multiple computations in parallel. - A qubit can represent a 1, 0, or combination of both simultaneously, exponentially increasing computing power compared to classical bits. However, measurement causes qubits to collapse to a single state. - While the concept originated in the 1950s, key developments included Deutsch proposing a quantum computer in 1984, Shor devising an algorithm in 1994, and teams building small 2-qubit and 4-qubit computers in the late 1990s and 2000s. Research continues on scaling challenges.

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Shivam Singh
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

QUANTUM

COMPUTING
PREPARED BY VISHAL GARG
CSE 5TH SEMESTER
[Link]/IN/
VISHALGARG4
WHAT IS
QUANTUM
COMPUTING?
• Quantum computing is the
computer technology based on the
principles of quantum theory,
which explains the nature and
behaviour of energy and matter on
the quantum (atomic and
subatomic) level.

• Quantum computing is essentially


harnessing and exploiting the
amazing laws of quantum
mechanics to process information.
WHAT IS “QUANTUM”?

• A classical binary bit is always in one of two


states—0 or 1—while a quantum bit or qubit
exists in both of its possible states at once, a
condition known as a superposition.
• An operation on a qubit thus exploits its
quantum weirdness by allowing many
computations to be performed in parallel.
• A two-qubit system would perform the
operation on 4 values, a three-qubit system on 8
and so forth.
WHAT IS “QUANTUM”?

• Rather than performing each calculation in turn on the


current single state of its bits, as a classical computer
does, a quantum computer's sequence of qubits can be in
every possible combination of 1s and 0s at once.
• This allows the computer to test every possible solution
simultaneously and to perform certain complex
calculations exponentially faster than a classical computer.
• One curious feature of a qubit is that measuring it causes
it to "collapse" into a single classical known state—0 or 1
again—and lose its quantum properties.
WHAT IS “QUANTUM”?

• Many quantum algorithms are non-deterministic;


they find many different solutions in parallel, only
one of which can be measured, so they provide the
correct solution with only a certain known
probability.
• Running the calculation several times will
increase the chances of finding the correct answer
but also may reduce quantum computing's speed
advantage.
HISTORY OF QUANTUM COMPUTING

Quantum computing tends to trace its roots back to a 1959 speech by Richard P. Feynman in
which he spoke about the idea of exploiting quantum effects to create more powerful
computers.

This speech is also generally considered the starting point of nanotechnology.

In 1984, David Deutsch was at a computation theory conference and began to wonder about
the possibility of designing a computer that was based exclusively on quantum rules, then
published his breakthrough paper a few months later.

With this, the race began to exploit his idea.


HISTORY OF QUANTUM COMPUTING

In 1994, AT&T's Peter Shor devised The first, a 2-qubit quantum In 2000, teams successfully built Research on the subject is still very
an algorithm that could use only 6 computer in 1998, could perform both a 4-qubit and a 7-qubit active, although some physicists
qubits to perform some basic trivial calculations before losing quantum computer. and engineers express concerns
factorizations ... more cubits the decoherence after a few over the difficulties involved in
more complex the numbers nanoseconds. upscaling these experiments to full-
requiring factorization became, of scale computing systems.
course.

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