Quantum theory, the Church–Turing principle and the universal quantum computer

1985 Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical and Physical Sciences 4,476 citations

Abstract

It is argued that underlying the Church–Turing hypothesis there is an implicit physical assertion. Here, this assertion is presented explicitly as a physical principle: ‘every finitely realizible physical system can be perfectly simulated by a universal model computing machine operating by finite means’. Classical physics and the universal Turing machine, because the former is continuous and the latter discrete, do not obey the principle, at least in the strong form above. A class of model computing machines that is the quantum generalization of the class of Turing machines is described, and it is shown that quantum theory and the 'universal quantum computer’ are compatible with the principle. Computing machines resembling the universal quantum computer could, in principle, be built and would have many remarkable properties not reproducible by any Turing machine. These do not include the computation of non-recursive functions, but they do include ‘quantum parallelism’, a method by which certain probabilistic tasks can be performed faster by a universal quantum computer than by any classical restriction of it. The intuitive explanation of these properties places an intolerable strain on all interpretations of quantum theory other than Everett’s. Some of the numerous connections between the quantum theory of computation and the rest of physics are explored. Quantum complexity theory allows a physically more reasonable definition of the ‘complexity’ or ‘knowledge’ in a physical system than does classical complexity theory.

Keywords

Quantum Turing machineTuring machineUniversal Turing machineQuantum computerSuper-recursive algorithmComputer scienceQuantum algorithmProbabilistic Turing machineNon-deterministic Turing machineDescription numberTheoretical computer scienceQuantum processOpen quantum systemQuantumQuantum networkQuantum mechanicsComputationAlgorithmQuantum dynamicsPhysics

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Publication Info

Year
1985
Type
article
Volume
400
Issue
1818
Pages
97-117
Citations
4476
Access
Closed

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David Deutsch (1985). Quantum theory, the Church–Turing principle and the universal quantum computer. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical and Physical Sciences , 400 (1818) , 97-117. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.1985.0070

Identifiers

DOI
10.1098/rspa.1985.0070