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Quantum Computing Algorithms

You're reading from   Quantum Computing Algorithms Discover how a little math goes a long way

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804617373
Length 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Barry Burd Barry Burd
Author Profile Icon Barry Burd
Barry Burd
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Quantum Computing 2. Part 1 Nuts and Bolts FREE CHAPTER
3. Chapter 1: New Ways to Think about Bits 4. Chapter 2: What Is a Qubit? 5. Chapter 3: Math for Qubits and Quantum Gates 6. Chapter 4: Qubit Conspiracy Theories 7. Part 2 Making Qubits Work for You
8. Chapter 5: A Fanciful Tale about Cryptography 9. Chapter 6: Quantum Networking and Teleportation 10. Part 3 Quantum Computing Algorithms
11. Chapter 7: Deutsch’s Algorithm 12. Chapter 8: Grover’s Algorithm 13. Chapter 9: Shor’s Algorithm 14. Part 4 Beyond Gate-Based Quantum Computing
15. Chapter 10: Some Other Directions for Quantum Computing 16. Assessments 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Baby steps toward quantum computing

The idea for quantum computing came in 1981 with presentations by Paul Benioff and Richard Feynman at the First Conference on the Physics of Computation. Fast forward to 1998, when the world’s first quantum computer had only two qubits.

Tip

For more information about the First Conference, the two-qubit computer, and other topics in this Introduction, refer to this chapter's Further reading section. You wouldn’t buy a laptop whose chip could process only two bits. In the same way, you wouldn’t expect a two-qubit quantum computer to solve your puzzling mathematical problems.

By 2006, the world had 12-qubit quantum computers. And by 2017, we had 50-qubit computers. The number of qubits in most advanced quantum computers of the early 2020s is in the low-to-mid hundreds. Compare this with a typical laptop’s memory, which stores about 64 billion bits.

Of course, the answer you get when you ask for a count of...

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