Harold U. Baranger, David P. DiVincenzo, et al.
Physical Review B
If the bits of computers are someday scaled down to the size of individual atoms, quantum mechanical effects may profoundly change the nature of computation itself. The wave function of such a quantum computer could consist of a superposition of many com-putations carried out simultaneously; this kind of parallelism could be exploited to make some important computational problems, like the prime factoring of large integers, tractable. However, building such a quantum computer would place undreamed of demands on the experimental realization of highly quantum-coherent systems; present-day experimental capabilities in atomic physics and other fields permit only the most rudimentary implementation of quantum computation.
Harold U. Baranger, David P. DiVincenzo, et al.
Physical Review B
Daniel Loss, Guido Burkard, et al.
Journal of Nanoparticle Research
Daniel Loss, David P. DiVincenzo
Physical Review A - AMO
David P. DiVincenzo, Michał Horodecki, et al.
Physical Review Letters