Abstract

The quantum computer, is a "supercomputer" that relies on the phenomena of quantum mechanics to perform operations on data. Object of suppositions, sometimes farfetched, quantum mechanics gave birth to the quantum computer, a machine capable of processing data tens of millions of times faster than a conventional computer. A quantum computer doesn't use the same memory as a conventional computer. Rather than a sequence of 0 and 1, it works with qubits or quantum bits. The quantum computer is a combination of two major scientific fields: quantum mechanics and computer science. Quantum mechanics, on which this computer is based, governs the movement of bodies in the atomic, molecular and corpuscular domains, is a theory whose logic is totally contrary to intuition and it is essential to use mathematics to fully grasp it. Quantum computing is the sub-domain of computer science that deals with quantum computers using quantum mechanical phenomena, as opposed to those of electricity exclusively, for so-called "classical" computing. The quantum phenomena used are quantum entanglement and superposition. The article examines some aspects related to the development, operation, advantages and difficulties, applications and future of the quantum computer.

Highlights

  • It was in the early 1980s that scientists began to realize that the future of the computer was based on quantum theory

  • The principle of the quantum computer is based on the properties of quantum mechanics

  • We have seen that it is 20 years since scientists realized that the conventional computer would soon reach its limits

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Summary

Introduction

It was in the early 1980s that scientists began to realize that the future of the computer was based on quantum theory. Himself, challenged quantum mechanics and proposed an experiment, which he called the EPR paradox, to prove that quantum mechanics was inaccurate. This experiment could only be carried out in 1981 by Alain Aspect because the technology of the time did not allow its realization. The result of this experiment proved, without any dispute, that quantum mechanics governed the movement of atoms [2, 3]

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