<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

<record version="1" id="631">
 <title>Quantum circuit</title>
 <name>QuantumCircuit</name>
 <created>2009-04-05 19:46:03</created>
 <modified>2009-04-05 19:46:03</modified>
 <type>Experiment</type>
 <creator id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <modifier id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <author id="441" name="bci1"/>
 <classification>
	<category scheme="msc" code="00."/>
	<category scheme="msc" code="02."/>
	<category scheme="msc" code="03."/>
	<category scheme="msc" code="03.65.Fd"/>
 </classification>
 <preamble></preamble>
 <content>\section{Quantum circuit simulation}
The following is an imaginary experiment or simulation of a quantum circuit
avalaible as a free download from \PMlinkexternal{$Mathematica^{(TM)}$ website}{http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/GeneratingEntangledQubits/}. The link shows 
how a `quantum circuit' of the selected design might perform a Hadamard operation followed by a simple CNOT operation with two qubits thus yielding an
entangled qubit (or `EPR') pair which is one the four Bell basis states (cf.
Brad Rubin, the author of this simulation).

 Such quantum circuits represent hypothetical possibilites for building a quantum `computer' that would handle qubits of information instead of the
regular bits in the existing, Boolean logic computers.</content>
</record>
