Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
What is a quantum computer?
It is tempting to say that a quantum computer is one whose operation is governed by the laws of quantum mechanics. But since the laws of quantum mechanics govern the behavior of all physical phenomena, this temptation must be resisted. Your laptop operates under the laws of quantum mechanics, but it is not a quantum computer. A quantum computer is one whose operation exploits certain very special transformations of its internal state, whose description is the primary subject of this book. The laws of quantum mechanics allow these peculiar transformations to take place under very carefully controlled conditions.
In a quantum computer the physical systems that encode the individual logical bits must have no physical interactions whatever that are not under the complete control of the program. All other interactions, however irrelevant they might be in an ordinary computer – which we shall call classical – introduce potentially catastrophic disruptions into the operation of a quantum computer. Such damaging encounters can include interactions with the external environment, such as air molecules bouncing off the physical systems that represent bits, or the absorption of minute amounts of ambient radiant thermal energy. There can even be disruptive interactions between the computationally relevant features of the physical systems that represent bits and other features of those same systems that are associated with computationally irrelevant aspects of their internal structure.
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