Title: Quantum Computing: An Overview for nonspecialists
1Quantum ComputingAn Overviewfor non-specialists
Financial supports from Kinki Univ., MEXT and
JSPS
- Mikio Nakahara
- Department of Physics
- Research Centre for Quantum Computing
- Kinki University, Japan
2Plan of lecture
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
3I. Introduction
4More complicated Example
5Quantum Computing/Information Processing
- Quantum computation information processing make
use of quantum systems to store and process
information. - Exponentially fast computation, totally safe
cryptosystem, teleporting a quantum state are
possible by making use of states operations
which do not exist in the classical world.
6Plan of lectures
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
72. Qubits
82.1 One Qubit
9Candidates of qubits
Electron, Spin 1/2 Nucleus
Grand State and Excited State of Atom or Ion
Photon
102.2 Two-Qubit System
112.3 Multi-qubit systems and entangled states
122.4 Algorithm Unitary Matrix
13Physical Implementation of U
14Plan of lectures
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
153. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuit and Quantum
Computer
16(No Transcript)
173.2 Quantum Gates
18Hadamard transform
19(No Transcript)
20 n-qubit Operations
21Quantum Mechanics
223.3 Universal Quantum Gates
233.4 Quantum Parallelism and Entanglement
24Power of Entanglement
25Plan of lectures
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
264. Simple Quantum Algorithms4.1 Deutschs
Algorithm
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29Plan of lectures
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
30Necessary Conditions for a PC to Work Properly
- Hardware (Memory, CPU etc),
- Able to reset all the memories to 0,
- The PC lasts till a computation stops (maybe a
problem if it takes more than 10 years to finish
the computation.) - Able to carry out any logic operations
- Able to output the results (display, printer, )
31Necessary Conditions for a Quantum Computer to
Work Properly (DiVincenzo Criteria)
- Hardware (Memory, CPU etc)
- Able to reset all the memories to 0,
-
- The PC lasts till a computation stops.
- Able to carry out any logic operations
- Able to output the results (display, printer, )
- A scalable physical system with well
characterized qubits. - The ability to initialize the state of the qubits
to a simple fiducial state, such as 000gt. - Long decoherence times, much longer than the gate
operation time. - A universal set of quantum gates.
- A qubit-specific measurement capability.
32DiVincenzo 2004_at_Kinki Univ.
33Physical Realization NMR
34Physical Realization Trapped Ions
35Physical Realization Josephson Junction Qubits
36Tunable coupling (interaction on demand)
37Physical Realization Neutral Atoms
38Physical Realization Quantum Dots
39Plan of lectures
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Qubits
- 3. Quantum Gates, Quantum Circuits and
- Quantum Computer
- 4. Simple Quantum Algorithms
- 5. DiVincenzo Criteria Physical Realizations
- 6. Shors Factorization Algorithm
40Difficulty of Prime Number Facotrization
- Factorization of N8902083681874790795683198927209
1600303613264603794247032637647625631554961638351
is difficult. - It is easy, in principle, to show the product of
p9281013205404131518475902447276973338969 and q
9591715349237194999547 050068718930514279 is N. - This fact is used in RSA (Rivest-Shamir-Adleman)
cryptosystem.
41Factorization algorithm
42Realization using NMR (1535)L. M. K.
Vandersypen et al (Nature 2001)
43NMR molecule and pulse sequence (300 pulses)
perfluorobutadienyl iron complex with the two
13C-labelled inner carbons
44(No Transcript)
45Foolproof realization is discouraging ?
Vartiainen, Niskanen, Nakahara, Salomaa (2004)
Foolproof implementation of the factorization
213 X 7 using Shors algorithm requires at least
22 qubits and approx. 82,000 steps!
46Summary
- Quantum information and computation are
interesting field to study. (Job opportunities at
industry/academia/military). - It is a new branch of science and technology
covering physics, mathematics, information
science, chemistry and more. - Thank you very much for your attention!
47(No Transcript)