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by littlestymaar
2434 days ago
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From the blog post (I haven't read the paper yet) that's also what I understand > we ran random hard circuits with 53 qubits and increasing depth, until reaching the point where classical simulation became infeasible Or am I misunderstanding something? (ELI5 plz, I'm not well-versed in quantum computing). |
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It looks like Martinis' group thought a "brute-force" simulation for 54 qubits is impossible, and this appoximate and "clever trick" is the only way to go at this number of qubits, but IBM says that with some different tricks, 54 qubits is still doable (I'm just guessing what they were thinking, and this is the only plausible explanation I can think of).
Overall, a discussion which has nothing to do with quantum supremacy really...
Whether it is a factor of a million or thousand though, the gap between a quantum computer will increase exponentially as the number of qubits is increased. This is fact, assuming quantum mechanics is correct.
Actually, physicists have been trying to deal with this painful fact for quite a long time: it is also the reason why many body physics is so hard computationally and we spent almost a century to develop approximate methods to calculate even the simplest idealistic situations even with hundreds or thousands of atoms using density functional theory, quantum monte carlo etc etc. The whole idea of quantum computation is to turn this difficulty upside down and try to use it into our advantage.