The column of equipment for a quantum computer (NY Times, May 2013) |
Richard Feynman, the mind behind quantum computers (Brain Pickings, 2013) |
A vibration filter from a quantum computer (D-Wave Blog, Jan 2007) |
A close up of a quantum computer's processing chip (BBC, May 2013) |
A regular bit in comparison to a qubit (University of Strathclyde, 2012 |
Computers work of the idea of data having a value of a one or zero, on or off, true or false. Those data values are called bits, short for binary digits. Using transistors on silicon chips, a computer can change them to from ones to zeros. Using this, a regular computer can process the complex tasks it is given. A quantum computer uses quantum bits, also known as qubits. Instead of transistors on a chip, qubits are manipulated as single
atoms. These atoms may be in many positions, which means they won’t strictly be in the configuration of a one or a zero. They can be a one, a zero, or something in between; a superstate of a one and zero. That is the quantum portion of quantum computing, the very erratic behavior of matter at an atomic level. That is also what gives this new technology an advantage over classic computers. The fact that these qubits can be measured as both a one and zero allows it to process information that would take classic computers ages to calculate. Quantum computer excel in problems dealing with efficiency: finding the easiest path to travel, searching a very large database faster than classic computers, etc. A good analogy of quantum computers versus classic computers is trying to find the lowest valley in a mountain range. A regular computer would go about doing this by rolling over every surface in the mountain range, often getting stuck in what it thinks are the lowest valleys when really they aren’t. A quantum computer instead tunnels through until it finds the lowest point, which is much faster. While modern supercomputers and classic algorithms currently surpass quantum computers on some problems, as the new technology improves it will hopefully far surpass traditional computers. (Contributed by Henry Meeker)
Qubit functions (Wikimedia Commons, 2007) |
The equipment required to keep these computers cold
(Grunert Imaging, May 2013)
|
D-Wave machines (D-Wave Systems, 2012) |
The sensitive processor (NY Times, March 2013) |
One of the mammoth D-Wave computers (Vancouver Sun, Feb 2014) |
The first commercially available quantum computers were released in 2010 by D-Wave Systems. Each year D-Wave doubled the amount of qubits in the computers and by 2013 they had 512 qubits and were ready to be released. Quantum computers are still a work in progress and will likely take many more years before all their uses are discovered and the developers finally understand exactly how it works. (Contributed by Isaac Fuglestad)
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