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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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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

9.5 Welcome to Delphi

In ancient Greece, the Oracle of Delphi was a high priestess at the Temple of Apollo who issued prophecies under the right conditions and during warm weather. oracle

In computer science, an oracle is a function that we supply with data, and it responds with a 1 for yes and a 0 for no. Our oracles cannot answer random questions; we build them to respond to specific queries. For an algorithm using an oracle, two things are significant:

  • The implementation of the oracle must be as fast and efficient as possible.
  • We want to call the oracle as few times as possible to minimize the algorithm’s complexity.

An oracle is a black box, meaning we understand its behavior but not how it does what it does. We use it without seeing inside it.

Since we can represent all classical data by bits, we express the inputs to the oracle function as strings of zeros and ones. If we call the function f, which is traditional...

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