matgb: Artwork of 19th century upper class anarchist, text: MatGB (Quantum)
Mat Bowles ([personal profile] matgb) wrote2006-02-24 12:01 am

Can someone explain this to me?

I know there are some physicists and other science types hanging around, this looks very cool, but it's way beyond my normal abilities to get the basics of science.
Quantum computer solves problem, without running
“In a sense, it is the possibility that the algorithm could run which prevents the algorithm from running,” Kwiat said. “That is at the heart of quantum interrogation schemes, and to my mind, quantum mechanics doesn’t get any more mysterious than this.”
From [livejournal.com profile] jackthomas

Oh yeah; the performancing plug in for Firefox is great, as is the Livejournal Hook extension; both are on addons.mozilla.org

[identity profile] poifaerie.livejournal.com 2006-02-24 06:59 am (UTC)(link)
In the equivalent of monosyllabic words...

A photon can be considered as a particle or a wave, or both at the same time, or neither (like liquids have properties of solids, gases, both and neither all at once). The particle bit can be considered to be in one state, or position, and the wave bit in another state or position while the photon is in both but yet neither states... with me so far?

There are lots of routes the photon could take through the algorith to reach an answer (like there are lots of routes through a building to get to a certain room), but they need only detect it in one position of one state to know where it it heading. So by superpositioning a photon is states of 1 and 0 (ie "run program" and "don't run program",) physicists are a very clever lot who can take a small amount of information (the position and state of a certain photon at a certain time) and extrapolate to find the large answer.

Does that help?