http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7085019.stm


*Future directions in computing*

Silicon electronics are a staple of the computing industry, but researchers
are now exploring other techniques to deliver powerful computers.

A quantum computer is a theoretical device that would make use of the
properties of quantum mechanics, the realm of physics that deals with energy
and matter at atomic scales.

In a quantum computer data is not processed by electrons passing through
transistors, as is the case in today's computers, but by caged atoms known
as quantum bits or Qubits.

"It is a new paradigm for computation," said Professor Artur Ekert of the
University of Oxford. "It's doing computation differently."

A bit is a simple unit of information that is represented by a "1" or a "0"
in a conventional electronic computer.

A qubit can also represent a "1" or a "0" but crucially can be both at the
same time - known as a superposition.

This allows a quantum computer to work through many problems and arrive at
their solutions simultaneously.

"It is like massively parallel processing but in one piece of hardware,"
said Professor Ekert.

'Complex systems'

This has significant advantages, particularly for solving problems with a
large amount of data or variables.

"With quantum computing you are able to attack some problems on the time
scales of seconds, which might take an almost infinite amount of time with
classical computers," Professor David Awschalom of the University of
California, Santa Barbara told the BBC News website recently.

In February 2007, the Canadian company D-Wave systems claimed to have
demonstrated a working quantum computer.

At the time, Herb Martin, chief executive officer of the company said that
the display represented a "substantial step forward in solving commercial
and scientific problems which, until now, were considered intractable."

But many in the quantum computing world have remained sceptical, primarily
because the company released very little information about the machine.

The display also failed to impress.

"It was not quite what we understand as quantum computing," said Professor
Ekert. "The demonstrations they showed could have been solved by
conventional computers."

However, Professor Ekert believes that quantum computing will eventually
come of age.

Then, he said, they will not be used in run-of-the-mill desktop applications
but specialist uses such as searching vast databases, creating uncrackable
ciphers or simulating the atomic structures of substances.

"The really killer application will probably be in designing new materials
or complex systems," he said.


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