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puting
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Copyright © 2006 by Morgan & Claypool
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in
any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other except for brief quotations
in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
puting puter Architects
Tzvetan S. Metodi and Frederic T. Chong
ISBN-10: 1598291181 paperback
ISBN-13: 9781598291186 paperback
ISBN-10: 159829119X ebook
ISBN-13: 9781598291193 ebook
DOI
A lecture in the Morgan & Claypool Synthesis Series
SYNTHESIS LECTURES PUTER ARCHITECTURE #1
Lecture #1
Series Editor: Mark D. Hill, University of Wisconsin, Madison
First Edition
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Printed in the United States of America
P1: IML/FFX P2: IML/FFX QC: IML/FFX T1: IML
MOBK053-FM MOBK053- October 30, 2006 19:32
puting
puter Architects
Tzvetan S. Metodi
University of California at Davis, Computer Science Department
Frederic T. Chong
University of California at Santa Barbara, Computer Science Department
SYNTHESIS LECTURES PUTER ARCHITECTURE #1
M
&C Morgan & Claypool Publishers
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ABSTRACT
putation may seem to be a topic for science fiction, but small puters
have existed for several years and larger machines are on the drawing table. These efforts
have been fueled by a tantalizing property: while puters employ a binary
representation that putational power to scale linearly with resources at best, quantum
computations employ quantum phenomena that can interact to putational power that
is exponential in the number of “quantum bits” in the system. Quantum devices rely on the
ability to control and manipu