- #1
samaaa
- 48
- 0
Hi
I read this information about the Qubit:
"N Qubits are equivalent 2^N classical bits (2^N states)"
But I couldn't understand that, because I know that each single Qubit could be one and zero at the same time, so each single Qubit is equivalent two classical bits (two states)
That mean:
If we have 3 Qubits it will be equivalent 6 classical bits(from 3×2)
If we have N Qubits it will be equivalent N×2 classical bits (not 2^N)
So can anyone tell me what is my misconception ?
I read this information about the Qubit:
"N Qubits are equivalent 2^N classical bits (2^N states)"
But I couldn't understand that, because I know that each single Qubit could be one and zero at the same time, so each single Qubit is equivalent two classical bits (two states)
That mean:
If we have 3 Qubits it will be equivalent 6 classical bits(from 3×2)
If we have N Qubits it will be equivalent N×2 classical bits (not 2^N)
So can anyone tell me what is my misconception ?