Quantum computing and quantum communications - Info and Reading Options
First NASA International Conference, QCQS'98 [i.e., QCQC'98], Palm Springs, California, USA, February 17-20, 1998 : selected papers
By QCQC '98 (1998 Palm Springs, Calif.)

"Quantum computing and quantum communications" was published by Springer in 1999 - Berlin, it has 480 pages and the language of the book is English.
“Quantum computing and quantum communications” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ Quantum computing and quantum communications
- Author: ➤ QCQC '98 (1998 Palm Springs, Calif.)
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 480
- Publisher: Springer
- Publish Date: 1999
- Publish Location: Berlin
“Quantum computing and quantum communications” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Congresses - Quantum computers - Optical communications - Quantum communication - Computer science - Data encryption (Computer science) - Coding theory - Quantum theory - Quantum computing
Edition Specifications:
- Pagination: x, 480 p. :
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL15465170M - OL11585128W
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 41445816
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 99034195
- ISBN-10: 354065514X
- All ISBNs: 354065514X
AI-generated Review of “Quantum computing and quantum communications”:
"Quantum computing and quantum communications" Description:
The Open Library:
? Colin P. Williams Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, CA 91109-8099, email: Colin. P. Williams@jpl. nasa. gov Over the past half century computers have gone from being the room-sized servants of a privileged few to the totable companions of business travellers, schoolchildren,andjust aboutanyonewho canpoint andclick a mouse. Inpart, this transformation was made possible by the dramatic miniaturization in the basic components of a computer. This trend was quantied in 1964 by Gordon Moore, one of the founders of Intel, who noticed that the amount of information that could be stored on a given amount of silicon doubled roughly every 18 months. The doubling trend continues to this day and, by crude extrapolation, predicts that the computers of 2020 might be approaching the one-atom-per-bit level. Physical systems such as atoms, however, behave in ways that are very d- ferent from everyday objects. In fact they are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics rather than classical mechanics. In the early 1980’s some foresighted physicists,suchesCharlesBennett(ourconferenceChairperson),RolfLandauer, Paul Benio, David Deutsch, and Richard Feynman, began to question what it would mean for a computer to operate at the one-atom-per-bit scale. The - ementary operations of such a computer would need to be described in terms of quantum mechanics. Recently, physicists and computer scientists have come to appreciate that certain quantum e ects, in particular superposition, int- ference, entanglement, non-locality, indeterminism, and non-clonability, allow entirely new kinds of tasks to be performed.
Read “Quantum computing and quantum communications”:
Read “Quantum computing and quantum communications” by choosing from the options below.
Search for “Quantum computing and quantum communications” downloads:
Visit our Downloads Search page to see if downloads are available.
Find “Quantum computing and quantum communications” in Libraries Near You:
Read or borrow “Quantum computing and quantum communications” from your local library.
- The WorldCat Libraries Catalog: Find a copy of “Quantum computing and quantum communications” at a library near you.
Buy “Quantum computing and quantum communications” online:
Shop for “Quantum computing and quantum communications” on popular online marketplaces.
- Ebay: New and used books.