H-bar None
- 45
- 0
How do quantum gates work and how our they different than classical gates?
The discussion revolves around the nature of quantum gates compared to classical gates, specifically focusing on the Fredkin gate and its properties of reversibility and universality as a classical gate. Participants explore concepts related to quantum computing, superposition, and the implications of these properties in computational contexts.
Participants express differing views on the nature of quantum gates and their implications, with no consensus reached on the specific properties of the Fredkin gate or the effectiveness of Deutsch's algorithm in addressing the posed problem.
Some discussions involve assumptions about the nature of quantum measurements and the implications of superposition, which may not be fully resolved. The exploration of the Fredkin gate's properties remains open-ended.
Individuals interested in quantum computing, the properties of quantum gates, and the theoretical underpinnings of classical and quantum computational models may find this discussion relevant.
Antiphon said:Crudely put, the idea is that a quantum system can achieve calculation with the
wavefunction in the "wave" mode rather than the "particle" mode. Wave phenomena
are inherently "parallel" when used as a computational tool, so you'd be doing lots
of "work" in a single computational step.
marlon said:Well, this is not really accurate. The biggest difference between a qubit and an ordinary bit is the fact that a bit is either 1 or 0. The qubit is a SUPERPOSITION of 1 and 0. So the qubit really is the 'combination' of the two possible bit-states.
A quantum computer could in principle try all the divisors simultaneously. You would
make a quantum "measurment" of the result that had no remainder, forcing the one calculation you wanted to see to become the manifested value.
H-bar None said:How do quantum gates work and how our they different than classical gates?