"This scheme probably will not work"
Nov. 16th, 2018 06:55 amИнтересная критическая статья о "квантовых компьютерах" написанная физиком. Я, правда, пафоса статьи не разделяю. Все эти пугающие экспоненты там именно для того, чтобы напугать читателя, реального смысла в них нет.
(no subject)
Date: 2018-11-16 03:13 pm (UTC)О, и оказывается Ю.И.Манин идейку подбросил! А потом уже Фейнман.
(Interesting how the only language people can use describing all this are "sets" and "continuous".)
(no subject)
Date: 2018-11-16 03:51 pm (UTC)при этом уже давно есть вещи, которые работают на коммерческом уровне. но это конечно не computing, а quantum encryption. вполне себе действует, и даже летает по самому обычному fiber'у. или с китайского спутника.
(no subject)
Date: 2018-11-16 10:21 pm (UTC)https://arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/9406058
These questions are hard, and probably most researchers aren't spending a lot of time answering them.
My take on the issue is that 1) D-Wave devices are not what was usually called quantum computing - they are not general-purpose quantum computers and, for instance, can't execute the Shor algorithm or other such algorithms. D-Wave devices are analog computers for special purpose computations. 2) Quantum computers have an unsolvable tension between trying to keep all qubits as isolated as possible to prevent errors and decoherence, and at the same time keep all cubits connected to a large number of classical control devices, so that the quantum computer can reliably execute all the different quantum operations, such as a phase rotation across a given subset of cubits and so on.
I believe that this tension is unsolvable, in particular, because designing a 10-qubit quantum computer is a completely new engineering challenge and not reducible to connecting two 5-qubit computers together (as is the case with classical computers). I heard a talk some years ago where it was explained that the design for 5-qubit computer does not work with 6 qubits, and different atoms need to be used as quantum devices for 6 qubits to work, and yet other atoms for 7 qubits. The periodic table has only a few atoms with specific necessary properties, and very quickly the designer of a quantum computer simply runs out of suitable atoms, so a 5-qubit design cannot be extended to 10 qubits.
If increasing the number of qubits by 10 requires a whole new design, it's safe to say that we will never get 1000-qubit computers.
(no subject)
Date: 2018-11-18 03:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2018-11-18 09:56 pm (UTC)Majorana fermions or something else might be indeed new mechanisms that are less sensitive to decoherence. However, the central difficulty of quantum computing still remains - you need to have a large quantum system that is at once well-insulated from the classical world to avoid decoherence, and yet at the same time all qubits must be strongly coupled to some parts of the exterior classical world so that the quantum state of the qubits can be controlled by the quantum computer's program code, executing an arbitrary sequence of quantum operations on a number of chosen subsets of qubits.