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What Is a Qubit?

Ciaran Hughes, Joshua Isaacson, Anastasia Perry, Ranbel F. Sun, Jessica Turner

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Abstract

Abstract In classical computers, information is represented as the binary digits 0 or 1. These are called bits. For example, the number 1 in an 8-bit binary representation is written as 00000001. The number 2 is represented as 00000010. We place extra zeros in front to write every number with 8-bits total, which is called one byte. In fact, every classical computer translates these bits into the human readable information on your electronic device. The document you read or video you watch is encoded in the computer binary language in terms of these 1’s and 0’s. Computer hardware understands the 1-bit as an electrical current flowing through a wire (in a transistor) while the 0-bit is the absence of an electrical current in a wire. These electrical signals can be thought of as “on” (the 1-bit) or “off” (the 0-bit). Your computer then decodes the classical 1 or 0 bits into words or videos, etc.

Topics & Concepts

DecodesByteBit (key)Computer scienceBinary numberArithmetic4-bitRepresentation (politics)Bit fieldQubitComputer hardware8-bitElectrical engineeringAlgorithmMathematicsDecoding methodsEngineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsMechanical engineeringPoliticsComputer securityDrillingCMOSQuantumPolitical scienceLawComputability, Logic, AI Algorithms
What Is a Qubit? | Litcius