量子计算与信息原理,卷一:基本概念PRINCIPLES OF QUANTUM COMPUTATION AND INFORMATION - VOLUME I: BASIC CONCEPTS

分类: 图书,进口原版书,科学与技术 Science & Techology ,
作者: Giuliano Benenti 著
出 版 社: Penguin
出版时间: 2004-12-1字数:版次: 1页数: 256印刷时间: 2004/10/01开本:印次: 1纸张: 胶版纸I S B N : 9789812388582包装: 平装编辑推荐
作者介绍Giuliano Benenti:
Giuliano Benenti. Born in Voghera (Pavia), Italy,November 7, 1969. He is a researcher in Theoreti-cal Physics at Universita dell' Insubria, Como. He re-ceived his Ph.D. in physics at Universita di Milano, Italyand was a postdoctoral fellow at CEA, Saclay, France.His main research interests are in the fields of classicaland quantum chaos, open quantumsystems,mesoscopicphysics, disordered systems, phase transitions, many-body systems and quantuminformationtheory.Readership: Undergraduates, physicists, electronic engineers, biologists and life-scientists interested in basic computational nano-engineering.
内容简介
Quantum computation and information is a new, rapidly developing interdisciplinary field. Therefore, it is not easy to understand its fundamental concepts and central results without facing numerous technical details. This book provides the reader a useful and not-too-heavy guide. It offers a simple and self-contained introduction; no previous knowledge of quantum mechanics or classical computation is required.
Volume 1 may be used as a textbook for a one-semester introductory course in quantum information and computation, both for upper-level undergraduate students and for graduate students. It contains a large number of solved exercises, which are an essential complement to the text, as they will help the student to become familiar with the subject. The book may also be useful as general education for readers who want to know the fundamental principles of quantum information and computation and who have the basic background acquired from their undergraduate course in physics, mathematics, or computer science. --This text refers to the
目录
Preface
Introduction
Introduction to Classical Computation
1.1 The Turing machine
1.1.1 Addition on a Turing machine
1.1.2 The Church-Turing thesis
1.1.3 The universal Turing machine
1.1.4 The probabilistic Turing machine
1.1.5 The halting problem
1.2 The circuit model of computation
1.2.1 Binary arithmetics
1.2.2 Elementary logic gates
1.2.3 Universal classical computation
1.3 Computational complexity
1.3.1 Complexity classes
1.3.2 The Chernoff bound
1.4 Computing dynamical systems
1.4.1 Deterministic chaos
1.4.2 Algorithmic complexity
1.5 Energy and information
1.5.1 Maxwell's demon
1.5.2 Landauer's principle
1.5.3 Extracting work from information
1.6 Reversible computation
1.6.1 Toffoli and fredkin gates
1.6.2 The billiard-ball computer
1.7 A guide to the bibliography
2.Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
2.1 The Stern-Gerlach experiment
2.2 Young's double-slit experiment
2.3 Linear vector spaces
2.4 The postulates of quantum mechanics
2.5 The EPR paradox and Bell's inequalities
2.6 A guide to the bibliography
3.Quantum Computation
3.1 The qubit
3.1.1 The Bloch sphere
3.1.2 Measuring the state of a qubit
3.2 The circuit model of quantum computation
3.3 Single-qubit gates
3.3.1 Rotations of the Bloch sphere
3.4 Controlled gates and entanglement generation
3.4.1 The Bell basis
3.5 Universal quantum gates
3.5.1 Preparation of the initial state
3.6 Unitary errors
3.7 Function evaluation
3.8 The quantum adder
3.9 Deutsch's algorithm
3.9.1 The Deutsch-Jozsa problem
3.9.2 An extension of Deutsch's algorithm
3.10 Quantum search
3.10.1 Searching one item out of four
3.10.2 Searching one item out of N
3.10.3 Geometric visualization
3.11 The quantum Fourier transform
3.12 Quantum phase estimation
3.13 Finding eigenvalues and eigenvectors
3.14 Period finding and Shor's algorithm
3.15 Quantum computation of dynamical systems
……
4.QUANTUM Communication
Appendix A solutions to the exercises
Bibliography
Index