What is Quantum computing?
First proposed in the 1970s, quantum computing relies on
quantum physics by taking advantage of certain quantum physics
properties of atoms or nuclei that allow them to work together as
quantum bits, or qubits, to be the computer's processor and memory.
By interacting with each other while being isolated from the external
environment, qubits can perform certain calculations exponentially
faster than conventional computers.
Qubits do not rely on the traditional binary nature of computing. While traditional computers encode information into bits
using binary numbers, either a 0 or 1, and can only do calculations on
one set of numbers at once, quantum computers encode information as a
series of quantum-mechanical states such as spin directions of electrons
or polarization orientations of a photon that might represent a 1 or a
0, might represent a combination of the two or might represent a number
expressing that the state of the qubit is somewhere between 1 and 0, or a
superposition of many different numbers at once. A quantum computer can
do an arbitrary reversible classical computation on all the numbers
simultaneously, which a binary system cannot do, and also has some
ability to produce interference between various different numbers. By
doing a computation on many different numbers at once, then interfering
the results to get a single answer, a quantum computer has the potential
to be much more powerful than a classical computer of the same size. In
using only a single processing unit, a quantum computer can naturally
perform myriad operations in parallel.
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