Quantum Computing
Thaddeus D. Ladd, Fedor Jelezko, Raymond Laflamme, Yasunobu Nakamura,, Christopher Monroe, Jeremy L. O'Brien

TL;DR
Quantum mechanics underpins modern technology and enables the development of quantum computers, which promise exponential computational advantages, with various physical systems being explored to realize practical quantum computing.
Contribution
This paper reviews the latest developments in quantum computing approaches and discusses the major challenges for future progress.
Findings
Quantum mechanics explains phenomena like entanglement and superposition.
Multiple physical systems are being developed for quantum computing.
Major challenges include scalability and error correction.
Abstract
Quantum mechanics---the theory describing the fundamental workings of nature---is famously counterintuitive: it predicts that a particle can be in two places at the same time, and that two remote particles can be inextricably and instantaneously linked. These predictions have been the topic of intense metaphysical debate ever since the theory's inception early last century. However, supreme predictive power combined with direct experimental observation of some of these unusual phenomena leave little doubt as to its fundamental correctness. In fact, without quantum mechanics we could not explain the workings of a laser, nor indeed how a fridge magnet operates. Over the last several decades quantum information science has emerged to seek answers to the question: can we gain some advantage by storing, transmitting and processing information encoded in systems that exhibit these unique…
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