Quantum Computing Without Magic - Devices
This text offers an introduction to quantum computing, with a special emphasis on basic quantum physics, experiment, and quantum devices. Unlike many other texts, which tend to emphasize algorithms, Quantum Computing without Magic explains the requisite quantum physics in some depth, and then explai...
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Main Author | |
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Format | eBook |
Language | English |
Published |
The MIT Press
20.06.2019
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Series | Scientific and Engineering Computation |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | This text offers an introduction to quantum computing, with a special
emphasis on basic quantum physics, experiment, and quantum devices. Unlike many
other texts, which tend to emphasize algorithms, Quantum Computing without Magic
explains the requisite quantum physics in some depth, and then explains the devices
themselves. It is a book for readers who, having already encountered quantum
algorithms, may ask, "Yes, I can see how the algebra does the trick, but how
can we actually do it?" By explaining the details in the context of the topics
covered, this book strips the subject of the "magic" with which it is so
often cloaked. Quantum Computing without Magic covers the essential probability
calculus; the qubit, its physics, manipulation and measurement, and how it can be
implemented using superconducting electronics; quaternions and density operator
formalism; unitary formalism and its application to Berry phase manipulation; the
biqubit, the mysteries of entanglement, nonlocality, separability, biqubit
classification, and the Schroedinger's Cat paradox; the controlled-NOT gate, its
applications and implementations; and classical analogs of quantum devices and
quantum processes. Quantum Computing without Magic can be used as a complementary
text for physics and electronic engineering undergraduates studying quantum
computing and basic quantum mechanics, or as an introduction and guide for
electronic engineers, mathematicians, computer scientists, or scholars in these
fields who are interested in quantum computing and how it might fit into their
research programs. |
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