9:55 AM
Hey! What do you mean by pass an input in? Grover uses an oracle to search all potential options to find the desired result — met927 46 secs ago
Are there codes, such as in Python, for implementing any of the quantum linear regression models shown in the four sources linked in this reply? — develarist 21 mins ago
5 hours later…
2:55 PM
Just to note $$H \otimes CNOT = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}\begin{bmatrix} CNOT & CNOT \\ CNOT & -CNOT\end{bmatrix}$$ And of course, this works generally. — Martin Vesely 1 min ago
Hi Stephen! Welcome to QCSE! When we have three entangled qubits, we usually like to think of them either in the GHZ state $\frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}(\vert 000\rangle+\vert 111\rangle)$ or in the W state $\frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}(\vert 001\rangle+\vert 010\rangle+\vert100\rangle)$.... (more) — Mark S 3 mins ago
3:20 PM
If your qubits are in the GHZ state in the standard basis, then measuring only two of them will tell you fully about the other one. Similarly, if you qubits are in the W state in the standard basis, then upon measuring your two qubits, this is enough information for you to determine the other one. The Wikipedia articles on the W and GHZ states are pretty good - can you consider reviewing them, and editing/revising your question in light of the Wikipedia articles, if you have questions about them to which you are uncertain? — Mark S 18 mins ago
1 hour later…
4:35 PM
Hey Anish - Could you clarify your question? Something to note is that DWave's chip is of a significantly different type than Google's, meaning that the qubit counts cannot be compared directly. Are you wondering whether a DWave device could demonstrate quantum supremacy? — C. Kang 7 mins ago
5:00 PM
@SanchayanDutta Deutsch is adamant that MWI is the only theory with any explanatory power for QM and QIT generally. I don't think he would say Shor's algorithm proves MWI, but he would say it's the only viable explanation physicists currently have and that it is, in principle, provable. He advocates this point here, and talks more candidly/casually about it here. Clearly, from the preceding comment, great minds don't always think alike. — ChainedSymmetry 21 mins ago
1 hour later…
6:15 PM
"built a quantum computer with 2000 Qubit which can be use to simulate the whole observable universe or to simulate whole brain for finding what the consciousness . And the future plan of Dwave is to build a quantum computer with 5000 qubits which is a lot of bit" it is not a computer in the sense that it can perform arbitrary computations, and no, it cannot "simulate the whole observable universe" etc. Where did you read that? Also, can you clarify the question? Are you asking whether D-Wave can be used for q supremacy experiments, or something else? — glS 2 mins ago
6:40 PM
Hey Kevin - in this form, I don't think the question is appropriate for the community. You could likely rephrase it to be more specific as to what aspects of the business side you're referring to, but our overall focus is on the technical aspects of quantum computers / algorithms. — C. Kang 2 mins ago
Hi Anish, welcome to QCSE. I have made some edits of your question for clarity and readability; I hope I did not deviate from the spirit of your question. But I agree with @C.Kang and gIS that the question is kind of unclear now. Can you further edit your question for clarity? — Mark S 13 mins ago
7:05 PM
I think @KevinColeman's second question would be fine, but I agree that the original question is off-topic — C. Kang 11 mins ago
@KevinColeman regardless of the usefulness of this, it is simply off-topic here. This sort of question might be more on-topic on meta. For this reason, this question is probably going to be moved there. You might try to ask that other question you mentioned in the comment in a seperate thread on this site, even though I would still personally consider that as opinion-based and therefore still off-topic on stackexchange — glS 13 mins ago
Here is an example of one of the questions I would be looking to get answers on. - EXAMPLE "What is this Quantum Communities acceptance level of Google claiming achieved Quantum Supremacy? — Kevin Coleman 13 mins ago
I was thinking they might like the information to assist them in their funding justification and potential of what the researchers are working on. You thought from that aspect? — Kevin Coleman 19 mins ago
7:30 PM
2 hours later…
9:10 PM
Personally, I think statements like a "to simulate the whole observable universe" or "to simulate whole brain for finding what out about consciousness" are simply a marketing. As mentioned above, could you please post a link to articles on those? — Martin Vesely 4 mins ago
9:35 PM
Hi Kevin, welcome to QCSE. If your question is "what do people who frequent the quantum computing stack exchange think of Google's paper," I recommend you review questions on this site with the "google-sycamore" tag - as in these questions. Other sources for good information on Google's claim can be found on Scott Aaronson's website. Otherwise, this question seems overly broad, or calls for opinion-only answers. Can you consider narrowing the scope of your question? — Mark S 6 mins ago
Something more on the implementation of GHZ and W: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/qute.201900015 — Martin Vesely 16 mins ago
10:00 PM
In an open forum most respondents felt quantum supremacy had been achieved but only for a very narrow and not too useful purpose (random number generation) OR Were not convinced what was achieved had risen to the level of Quantum Supremacy — Kevin Coleman 6 mins ago
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