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Polynomial-Time Algorithms for Prime Factorization and Discrete Logarithms on a Quantum Computer
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A digital computer is generally believed to be an efficient universal computing device; that is, it is believed able to simulate any physical computing device with an increase in computation time of at most a polynomial factor. This may not be true when quantum mechanics is taken into consideration. This paper considers factoring integers and finding discrete logarithms, two problems which are generally thought to be hard on a classical computer and have been used as the basis of several proposed cryptosystems. Efficient randomized algorithms are given for these two problems on a hypothetical quantum computer. These algorithms take a number of steps polynomial in the input size, e.g., the number of digits of the integer to be factored.
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Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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The Heisenberg Representation of Quantum Computers
Quantum states for error correction are described by their stabilizer, a commuting group of tensor products of Pauli matrices, enabling analysis of a rich class of quantum effects short of full quantum computation.
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Quantum speedups arise from engineered interference in high-dimensional Hilbert spaces rather than classical branchwise parallelism, constrained by no unitary garbage erasure, contextuality, and absence of absorbing h...
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