What is Quantum Computing and How it Works

Authors

  • Bahman Zohuri Adjunct Professor, Golden Gate University, Ageno School of Business, Data Analytic, San Francisco, California, USA Author
  • Farhang Mossavar Rahmani Professor of Finance and Director of MBA School of Business and Management, National University, San Diego, California, USA Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47363/JMSMR/2020(1)104

Keywords:

Quantum Computing and Computer, Classical Computing and Computer, Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Fuzzy Logic, Resilience System, Forecasting and Related Paradigm, Big Data, Commercial and Urban Demand for Electricity

Abstract

Companies such as Intel as a pioneer in chip design for computing are pushing the edge of computing from its present Classical Computing generation to the next generation of Quantum Computing. Along the side of Intel corporation, companies such as IBM, Microsoft, and Google are also playing in this domain. The race is on to build the world’s first meaningful quantum computer—one that can deliver the technology’s long-promised ability to help scientists do things like develop miraculous new materials, encrypt data with near-perfect security and accurately predict how Earth’s climate will change. Such a machine is likely more than a decade away, but IBM, Microsoft, Google, Intel, and other tech heavyweights breathlessly tout each tiny, incremental step along the way. Most of these milestones involve packing more quantum bits, or qubits—the basic unit of information in a quantum computer—onto a processor chip ever. But the path to quantum computing involves far more than wrangling subatomic particles. Such computing capabilities are opening a new area into dealing with the massive sheer volume of structured and unstructured data in the form of Big Data, is an excellent augmentation to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and would allow it to thrive to its next generation of Super Artificial Intelligence (SAI) in the near-term time frame.

Author Biographies

  • Bahman Zohuri, Adjunct Professor, Golden Gate University, Ageno School of Business, Data Analytic, San Francisco, California, USA


    Adjunct Professor, Golden Gate University, Ageno School of Business, Data Analytic, San Francisco, California, USA

  • Farhang Mossavar Rahmani, Professor of Finance and Director of MBA School of Business and Management, National University, San Diego, California, USA

    Professor of Finance and Director of MBA School of Business and Management, National University, San Diego, California, USA 

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Published

2020-07-28