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- Joined
- 8 Feb 2004
- Posts
- 4,539
Have watched some youtube vids etc on this and think I get the general gist that the superposition state of qubits gives the computer the opportunity to exist in an exponetially increasing number of states simultaneously as more qubits are added. Conversely, a conventional computer can only exist in one state at once but it can obviously cycle through states incredibly quickly (number crunching). What I do not understand is how you use use these superposition states in a beneficial way in terms of an algorithm to solve the optimisation and modelling problems that quantum computers are supposed to be able to tackle. Can someone explain it in as simple terms as possible?