Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session G70: Poster Session I (2:00pm-5:00pm)
2:00 PM,
Tuesday, March 5, 2019
BCEC
Room: Exhibit Hall
Abstract: G70.00386 : Why We Should Be Skeptical of Quantum Computing
Presenter:
Alan M. Kadin
(Consultant, Princeton Junction, NJ 08550)
Author:
Alan M. Kadin
(Consultant, Princeton Junction, NJ 08550)
1) The promised performance depends on entanglement-based scaling to massive parallelism, which has not been verified, and may be tested [1].
2) Even if the theory were correct, exponential sensitivity to noise for highly entangled states could make the technology impractical [2].
3) Evidence for entanglement in superconducting qubits can be explained using the nonlinear properties of classical Josephson junctions [3].
4) Evidence for entanglement in arrays of coupled qubits can be explained using conventional energy-band theory with delocalized states.
[1] A.M. Kadin and S.B. Kaplan, “Proposed experiments to test the foundations of quantum computing”, 2016, http://vixra.org/abs/1607.0105.
[2] G. Kilai, “The Quantum Computer Puzzle ,” 2016, https://arxiv.org/pdf/1605.00992.pdf
[3] J. Blackburn, et al., “Survey of Classical and Quantum Interpretations of experiments on Josephson junctions at very low temperatures”, Phys. Rep. 611, 2016. https://arxiv.org/pdf/1602.05316.pdf
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