brute force physics Was: cleversafe...

David Wagner daw at cs.berkeley.edu
Tue Aug 11 23:05:45 EDT 2009


Alexander Klimov  wrote:
> A problem with this reasoning is that the physical world and the usual
> digital computers have exponential simulation gap (it is known at
> least in one direction: to simulate N entangled particles on a digital
> computer one needs computations exponential in N). This can be
> considered as a reason to suspect that physical world is
> non-polynomially faster than the usual computers (probably even to an
                                                    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> extent that all NP computations can be simulated).
  ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

It is a commonly-held myth that quantum computers could solve
NP-complete problems, but most experts who have studied the issue
believe this is probably not the case.  There is no reason to think
that quantum computation could solve all NP problems in polynomial
time, and in fact, there are good reasons to believe this is
likely not the case.

(Do note that factoring is not NP-complete.)

See, e.g.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_computing#Relation_to_computational_complexity_theory

or for a more nuanced and deep treatment of these issues,

http://www.scottaaronson.com/papers/npcomplete.pdf

---------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cryptography Mailing List
Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to majordomo at metzdowd.com



More information about the cryptography mailing list