D Wave – The World’s First Quantum Super Computer

Jul 23, 2013 at 12:33am EDT
D Wave - The World’s First Quantum Super Computer
Photo courtesy of D-Wave Systems Inc.

Some of us remember watching Code Lyoko on the old Cartoon Network and wondering what we wouldn’t give to have a Quantum Computer in our backyard. Apparently that dream is no longer an impossible fantasy. After years of research and impractical prototypes the World’s First Quantum Computer, the D-Wave, has gone commercial.

The D-Wave Two

Rank: The World’s first Quantum Computer
Power: 512 Qubits
Operating Temperature: 0.02 Kelvin (0 Kelvin is Absolute Zero)
Casing :  Self-Contained Unit

Quantum Computing

Quantum Computing works by using a processor that harnesses the very nature of Quantum Mechanics itself. It harnesses the power of electrons and protons to solve incredibly complex and massive algorithms in no time at all. The true power of Quantum Computing lies in the fact that due to the nature of the electron ( it can be in two places at once!) instead of just 1 and 0 there is a third mode known as 1 superimposed 0. (Qubits instead of Bits) The simultaneous state of being activated and deactivated at the same time.

 

Qubits not bits.

Now consider this
In a Binary system with 1 element there is only two possible combinations 1 and 0
In a Qubit system with 1 element there are three possible combinations 1, 0 and 1-superimposed-0
In a Binary system with 2 elements there are four possible combinations 00, 10, 01, and 11
In a Qubit system with 2 elements there are nine possible combinations 00, 01, 0x, 10, 11, 1x, x0, x1, xx (x being the superimposed state)

See how the power increases exponentially. Now imagine the power of a 512 Qubit System. The thought is frankly scary. And D Wave is technically still in its infancy, imagine what power it could wield in 5 years.

Real Life Applications


Quantum computing will revolutionize the way we treat Information Technology. Remember those pesky Encryption Algorithms? The ones that would take even normal computers thousands of years to solve (AES 256 Bit Encryption)? Well that is because a normal processor would solve it by trying out every combination one by one. A Quantum computer would simply try all combinations simultaneously giving the answer in a fraction of a fraction of a time.

A Quantum Computer would allow the solution to problems so complex that it would take a normal processor an impractical amount of time to solve.  This is called optimization.

Optimization would make the D Wave lighting fast at solving some specific problems while only average at others.

Interesting Facts about Quantum Computing and the D-Wave

D Wave at Google HQ.

Photo courtesy of D-Wave Systems Inc.

Inside a D Wave System.

About the author: PC Hardware and Technology Enthusiast, Blood of Silicon (1 nm),

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