X-Message-Number: 18669
From: 
Date: Wed, 27 Feb 2002 16:14:10 EST
Subject: Re: CryoNet #18622 Simulation

--part1_71.1b33e55d.29aea622_boundary
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit



> 
> >So there is not a single word selected, what 
> >remains is a set of words, each one is an elementary cube  address., 
> >precisely the addresses in the "on" state.
> 
> And how do you read them out ??????
> 
> You would still need to perform more quantum logic, and you would 
> still need 2^608 qubits to transfer result into, and then collapse 
> those qubits, to be able to read out the bit content.
> 
> And how do you perform the simulation itself without more qubits?

Assume we have 3 qbits, mark them "x" when they are in a superposition state, 
so at start we have:
xxx
This can be collapsed to any number from 000 to 111, that is 8 possibilities.
If you are doing a computation with a single answer, such a factorization, 
you could end for example with: 101
Here we end with a set of "on" words, for example 001 and 011, the midle 
digit is not the same, so the final state is: 0x1, here, one digit remains in 
a superposition state. You don't read that state because the universe it 
defines is not a part of the euclidean one. We are not speaking about the 
creation of an additive part to our universe, it is a complete univeres, 
outside our own.

In my example you see that you can't choose any "on" states at random, for 
example 100 and 011 let the system in full superposition: xxx. This is 
equivalent to say, there can't be a jump for a particle from one place at one 
instant to a far aways position at the next instant. (we have discovered the 
speed limit c!).

Yvan Bozzonetti.




--part1_71.1b33e55d.29aea622_boundary

 Content-Type: text/html; charset="US-ASCII"

[ AUTOMATICALLY SKIPPING HTML ENCODING! ] 

Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=18669