Researchers use nuclear magnetic resonance in experiment.
Published:
6 July 1999 y., Tuesday
D. Cory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Raymond Laflamme of Los Alamos National Laboratory and colleagues report that have come up with a general scheme for quantum simulation that would work on any quantum computer. In a paper in the June 28 issue of Physical Review Letters, the researchers say they demonstrated the scheme on a liquid-state nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computer developed at MIT. The possible applications of quantum computing techniques have been studied since the 1980s. But the field took off in earnest only in 1994, when AT&T mathematician Peter Shor discovered that quantum computing could efficiently find the prime factors of large numbers. Such prime factorization could provide a method for cracking some of the most widely used methods for encrypting sensitive data. Around the same time, Seth Lloyd, associate professor of mechanical engineering at MIT, proposed that a quantum computer could be built from an array of coupled two-state quantum systems, each of which can store one quantum bit, or qubit. Cory_s research group, and Neil Gershenfeld and colleagues in MIT_s Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, with Isaac Chuang at IBM, independently helped develop the quantum computer. At the moment, quantum computers don_t possess the calculating power of a pocket calculator. But quantum computing has the potential to surpass conventional computing techniques in power and efficiency. Because quantum mechanics allows a quantum computer_s components to represent many states simultaneously, it should be able to perform many computations simultaneously. A quantum computer may be able to solve quickly problems involving weather prediction and fluid flow - problems so big they couldn_t be stored in a conventional computer_s memory.
Šaltinis:
Internet
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Wincor Nixdorf AG has opened a global distribution center in Singapore to support its growing operations in Asia Pacific.
more »
Over 3 million people in Europe bet online on sports like football, cricket and horse racing.
more »
Executives from Wincor Nixdorf Inc. (USA) hosted a bankers' forum last month, highlighting emerging trends in a challenging U.S. economic environment.
more »
The appeal for a reverse ATM code has again popped up in mainstream press, this time in Illinois, where the (Peoria, Ill.) Journal Star last week reported about a technology that has been discussed in the industry for several years, yet fails to take off.
more »
At the CeBIT fair grounds in Hanover, Germany, you move into a different realm. One with robots - lots of bots.
more »
During the 10th annual ATM Industry Association conference last month, ATMIA and ATM Marketplace recognized four leading ATM players for their individual or combined contributions to the ATM Industry.
more »
The show held annually in the northern German city of Hannover usually invites a foreign nation to become an official partner, but in a historic move that distinction was granted to the State of California this year.
more »
After a six-month research project that involved the surveying of some 1,600 ATM and financial executives from throughout the world, ATM Marketplace and the ATM Industry Association have announced plans to release the findings of their research next month.
more »
Technology Credit Union has teamed with LocatorSearch to introduce a global positioning system (GPS) download to help members find surcharge-free ATMs.
more »
It's easy to demonise violent video games, but a report making its way through parliament says that "video games can have beneficial effects upon young people."
more »