Physics and Computation
This Element has three main aims. First, it aims to help the reader understand the concept of computation that Turing developed, his corresponding results, and what those results indicate about the limits of computational possibility. Second, it aims to bring the reader up to speed on analyses of computation in physical systems which provide the most general characterizations of what it takes for a physical system to be a computational system. Third, it aims to introduce the reader to some different kinds of quantum computers, describe quantum speedup, and present some explanation sketches of quantum speedup. If successful, this Element will equip the reader with a basic knowledge necessary for pursuing these topics in more detail.
Product details
September 2021Paperback
9781009108553
75 pages
228 × 151 × 6 mm
0.136kg
Not yet published - available from May 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Turing's 1936 Paper
- 3. The Church-Turing Thesis and the Physical Church-Turing Thesis
- 4. Accounts of Computational Implementation
- 5. Quantum Computers
- 6. Quantum Speedup
- References.