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IBM's Test-Tube Quantum Computer Makes History
When quantum computers were first proposed in the 1970s and
1980s (by theorists such as the late Richard Feynman of
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif.; Paul
Benioff of Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois; David
Deutsch of Oxford U. in England., and Charles Bennett of IBM's
T.J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, N.Y.), many
scientists doubted that they could ever be made practical.
But in 1994, Peter Shor of AT&T Research described a specific
quantum algorithm for factoring large numbers exponentially
faster than conventional computers -- fast enough to defeat the
security of many public-key cryptosystems. The potential of
Shor's algorithm stimulated many scientists to work toward
realizing the quantum computers' potential. Significant progress
has been made in recent years by numerous research groups around
the world.
While at IBM, Chuang extended his reputation as one of the
world's leading quantum computing experimentalist. He led the
team that demonstrated the world's first 2-qubit quantum
computer (in 1998 at University of California Berkeley). At
IBM-Almaden, Chuang and colleagues were first to demonstrate
important quantum computing algorithms -- Grover's
database-search algorithm in 1999 with a 3-qubit quantum
computer and order finding last year (August 2000) with a
5-qubit quantum computer. The factorization using Shor's
algorithm announced today is the most complex algorithm yet to
be demonstrated by a quantum computer.
In addition to its ambitious experimental program, IBM Research
is also noted for its many theoretical contributions to the
emerging field of quantum information. IBM scientists pioneered
quantum cryptography, quantum communications (including the
concept of quantum teleportation) and efficient methods of error
correction.
David DiVincenzo, research staff member at
IBM's Watson lab, has promulgated the five criteria necessary
for a practical quantum computer: a scalable physical system
with well-characterized qubits;
the ability to initialize the qubit state;
decoherence times much longer than the quantum gate operation
time;
a universal set of quantum gates; and the ability to measure
specific qubits.
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