In this paper we argue that one-way quantum computation can be seen as a form of phase transition with the available information about the solution of the computation being the order parameter. We draw a number of striking analogies between standard thermodynamical quantities such as energy, temperature, work, and corresponding computational quantities such as the amount of entanglement, time, potential capacity for computation, respectively. Aside from being intuitively pleasing, this picture allows us to make novel conjectures, such as an estimate of the necessary critical time to finish a computation and a proposal of suitable architectures for universal one-way computation in 1D. © 2008 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
In classical thermodynamics the work cost of control can typically be neglected. On the contrary, in...
As our demand for computational power grows, we encounter the question: What are the physical limit...
The reversible computation paradigm aims to provide a new foundation for general classical digital c...
In this thesis we summarize the principles of quantum computing. We specifically consider adiabatic ...
Recent understanding of the thermodynamics of small-scale systems have enabled the characterization ...
Thermodynamics is a highly successful macroscopic theory widely used across the natural sciences and...
Landauer’s principle states that it costs at least kBT ln 2 of work to reset one bit in the presence...
Quantum mechanics can simulate a classical system evolving in (and towards) thermal equilibrium. Thi...
We construct two spin models on lattices (both two and three dimensional) to study the capability of...
The amount of heat generated by computers is rapidly becoming one of the main problems for developin...
Irreversible information processing cannot be carried out without some inevitable thermodynamical wo...
Quantum Computation – p.1/15 Computation Any physical process evolves an initial state to a final st...
We investigate the fundamental limitations imposed by thermodynamics for creating correlations. Cons...
We describe how physics of computation determines computational complexity. In particular we show ho...
Any computation is facilitated by some physical process, and the observable quantities of any physic...
In classical thermodynamics the work cost of control can typically be neglected. On the contrary, in...
As our demand for computational power grows, we encounter the question: What are the physical limit...
The reversible computation paradigm aims to provide a new foundation for general classical digital c...
In this thesis we summarize the principles of quantum computing. We specifically consider adiabatic ...
Recent understanding of the thermodynamics of small-scale systems have enabled the characterization ...
Thermodynamics is a highly successful macroscopic theory widely used across the natural sciences and...
Landauer’s principle states that it costs at least kBT ln 2 of work to reset one bit in the presence...
Quantum mechanics can simulate a classical system evolving in (and towards) thermal equilibrium. Thi...
We construct two spin models on lattices (both two and three dimensional) to study the capability of...
The amount of heat generated by computers is rapidly becoming one of the main problems for developin...
Irreversible information processing cannot be carried out without some inevitable thermodynamical wo...
Quantum Computation – p.1/15 Computation Any physical process evolves an initial state to a final st...
We investigate the fundamental limitations imposed by thermodynamics for creating correlations. Cons...
We describe how physics of computation determines computational complexity. In particular we show ho...
Any computation is facilitated by some physical process, and the observable quantities of any physic...
In classical thermodynamics the work cost of control can typically be neglected. On the contrary, in...
As our demand for computational power grows, we encounter the question: What are the physical limit...
The reversible computation paradigm aims to provide a new foundation for general classical digital c...