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K Quantum Computing

The document provides an overview of quantum computing, explaining its principles, advantages, and applications. It contrasts quantum computing with classical computing, highlighting the use of qubits and concepts such as superposition and entanglement. The potential applications of quantum computing span various fields, including cryptography, drug discovery, and machine learning, while also noting the challenges that need to be addressed for practical implementation.

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K.sai sree lasya
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views14 pages

K Quantum Computing

The document provides an overview of quantum computing, explaining its principles, advantages, and applications. It contrasts quantum computing with classical computing, highlighting the use of qubits and concepts such as superposition and entanglement. The potential applications of quantum computing span various fields, including cryptography, drug discovery, and machine learning, while also noting the challenges that need to be addressed for practical implementation.

Uploaded by

K.sai sree lasya
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Dr.

YSR ARCHITECTURE AND FINE ARTS UNIVER

QUANTUM
COMPUTING
P.KARTHIK REDDY UNDER THE GUIDANCE
DTDP OF
21111DT0017 M.PADMAJA M.Tech.,
SEMESTER-VIII (Ph.D)
Table of Content
Introduction

History

Classic vs Quantum computing

Principles of Quantum Computing

Advantages &
Disadvantages

Applications

Conclusion
Introduction
What does "quantum" mean?
 The word "quantum" in a quantum computer, originates from "quantum mechanics," a
basic theory in physics. In brief, on the scale of atoms and molecules, matter behaves in a
quantum manner.

What is a Quantum Computer?


 A quantum computer is a machine that performs calculations based on the laws of
quantum mechanics, which is the behavior of particles at the sub-atomic level.

 Quantum computing is an advanced technology that uses qubits instead of traditional bits.
 It leverages superposition (processing multiple states at once) and entanglement (strong
qubit connections) to solve complex problems faster than classical computers.
 It has potential applications in cryptography, AI, drug discovery, and optimization, making
History

Conceptual Key Algorithms


Developed(1990s) Early
Foundations(1980s
Experiments(2000s)
)
Richard Feynman Researchers built basic
Peter Shor and Lov
and Yuri Manin quantum circuits and
Grover developed
proposed that D-Wave introduced the
groundbreaking
quantum systems first quantum annealer
algorithms showing
could be simulated for solving
how quantum
using quantum optimization problems.
computers could
computers. outperform classical
ones in factoring and
searching.
History

Quantum Quantum supremacy Towards Practical


Processors Achieved(2019) Quantum
Emerge(2010s) Computing(2020s &
Beyond) shifted
Focus to
Companies like IBM Google announced
and Google building scalable,
quantum supremacy by
developed small- error-corrected
solving a complex
scale quantum quantum systems with
problem faster than the
processors and real-world applications
world’s most powerful
began offering in AI, cryptography,
supercomputer.
access through the and drug discovery

cloud
Classic vs Quantum Computing
Feature Classic Computing Quantum Computing
Qubit (0, 1, or both at the
Basic Unit Bit (0 or 1)
same time)
Working Uses binary logic and
Based on quantum mechanics
Principle classical physics
Processing Processes one state at a Can process many states at
Power time once (superposition)
Slower for complex Much faster for certain
Speed
problems complex problems

Stores multiple possibilities in


Data Storage Stores definite values
one qubit

Web browsing, word Cryptography, AI, drug


Examples of Use
processing, games discovery, complex simulations
Prone to errors, still in early
Stability Stable and reliable
development
Principles of Quantum Computing

 Quantum computing is based on the principles of quantum mechanics.


 Unlike classical computers that use bits (Os and 1s), quantum computers use qubits, which
can exist in multiple states simultaneously.
 The core principles of quantum computing are:

Qubits Superposition Quantum


Entanglement

Quantum Quantum Quantum


Interferen Parallelism Measurement &
ce Wavefunction
Collapse
Principles of Quantum Computing
Qubits:
 Classical computers use binary bits (0 or 1).
 Qubits, however, can be in the superposition of both 0 and 1 simultaneously.
 Qubits are implemented using quantum particles like electrons, photons, or
superconducting circuits.
Superposition:
 A qubit can exist in multiple states at the same time (both 0 and 1).
 This allows quantum computers to process vast amounts of data in parallel.
 Example: If a classical bit is like a coin that lands either on heads (0) or tails (1), a qubit
is like a spinning coin that can be both at once until observed.
Mathematically: A qubit state is written as:
∣𝜓⟩=𝛼∣0⟩+𝛽∣1⟩
where α and β are probability amplitudes.
Principles of Quantum Computing
Quantum Entanglement:
 When two qubits become entangled, their states become linked, regardless of distance.
 Changing one qubit instantaneously affects the other.
 This is used for secure communication (Quantum Cryptography) and speeding up
computations.
 Example: Imagine two entangled qubits: if one is measured as 0, the other will
immediately be 1, even if they are light-years apart.
Quantum Interference:
 Quantum states interfere with each other, affecting the probability of different
outcomes.
 Quantum algorithms amplify correct results while canceling incorrect ones.
 It is used in Shor’s Algorithm (for factorizing large numbers) and Grover’s Algorithm (for
searching databases faster than classical computers).
Principles of Quantum Computing
Quantum Parallelism:
 Due to superposition, quantum computers can perform multiple calculations at once.
 This enables exponential speedup for certain problems compared to classical computers.
 Example: A 100-qubit quantum computer can process 2¹⁰⁰ states simultaneously, which
is more than the atoms in the universe!
Quantum Measurement & Wavefunction collapse:
 When a qubit is measured, it collapses into either 0 or 1 with certain probabilities.
 Measurement destroys superposition, meaning quantum computations must be designed
carefully to extract useful information before measurement.
Example:
 Before measurement: ∣ψ⟩=12(∣0⟩+∣1⟩)
 After measurement: Either |0⟩ (50%) or |1⟩ (50%)
Adavntages & Disadvantages

Advantages Disadvantages

 Speed & Parallelism  Complexity


 Solving Complex Problems  Hardware Challenges
 Enhanced Cryptography  Decoherence
 Security  High Cost
 Innovation  Instability
 Simulation of Quantum  Threat to classic Encryption
Systems
Applications

 Cryptography  Aerospace & Defense


 Drug discovery  Material Science
 Machine Learning  Secure Communication
 Financial Modeling  Energy grid management
 Climate Modeling  Genome Analysis
Conclusion

 Quantum computing uses the principles of quantum mechanics to process


information in powerful new ways.
 It offers massive speed and efficiency for solving complex problems that classical
computers struggle with.
 Applications include cryptography, drug discovery, machine learning, optimization,
and more.
 Quantum technology is still developing and faces challenges like qubit stability and
error correction.
 In the future, quantum computers are expected to become faster, more reliable, and
widely accessible.
Thank You

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