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Dancing with Qubits

You're reading from   Dancing with Qubits From qubits to algorithms, embark on the quantum computing journey shaping our future

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837636754
Length 684 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Robert S. Sutor Robert S. Sutor
Author Profile Icon Robert S. Sutor
Robert S. Sutor
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Toc

Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface I Foundations
Why Quantum Computing FREE CHAPTER They’re Not Old, They’re Classics More Numbers Than You Can Imagine Planes and Circles and Spheres, Oh My Dimensions 6 What Do You Mean “Probably”? II Quantum Computing
One Qubit Two Qubits, Three Wiring Up the Circuits From Circuits to Algorithms Getting Physical III Advanced Topics
Considering NISQ Algorithms Introduction to Quantum Machine Learning Questions about the Future Afterword
A Quick Reference B Notices C Production Notes Other Books You May Enjoy
References
Index
Appendices

6.3 Wrong again?

Suppose you have a faulty calculator that does not always compute the correct result.

If the probability of getting the wrong answer is p, the probability of getting the correct answer is 1 – p. We call this the complementary probability. We assume 0 < p < 1. Assuming there is no connection between the attempts, the probability of getting the wrong answer two times in a row is p2, and the probability of getting the correct answer two times in a row is (1 – p)2. probability$complementary

Exercise 6.3

Compute p2 and (1 – p)2 for p = 0, p = 0.5, and p = 1.0.

To make this analysis useful, we want the probability of failure p to be nonzero.

For n independent attempts, the probability of getting the wrong answer is pn. Let’s suppose p = 0.6. We get the wrong answer 60% of the time in many attempts. We get the correct answer 40% of the time.

After 10 attempts, the...

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