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28 - What has quantum mechanics to do with factoring? April 2007

from Part One - Reference Frame Columns, Physics Today 1988–2009

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2016

N. David Mermin
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
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Summary

A quantum computer is a digital computer capable of exploiting quantum coherence among the physical two-state systems that store the binary arithmetic information.

To factor an integer is to find its (unique) expression as a product of prime numbers.

The most impressive, most important, and best-known thing a quantum computer can do is to factor with spectacular efficiency the product of two enormous prime numbers. But what on earth can quantum mechanics have to do with factoring?

This question bothered me for four years, from the time I heard about the discovery that a quantum computer was spectacularly good at factoring until I finally took the trouble to find out how it was done. The answer, you will be relieved—but, if you're like me, also a little disappointed—to learn, is that quantum mechanics has nothing at all directly to do with factoring. But it does have a lot to do with waves. Many important waves are periodic, so it is not very surprising that quantum mechanics might be useful in efficiently revealing features associated with periodicity.

Quantum mechanics is connected to factoring through periodicity. It turns out, for purely arithmetic reasons having nothing to do with quantum mechanics, that if we have an efficient way to find the period of a periodic function, then, as we shall see below, we can easily factor the product of two enormous prime numbers. And a quantum computer provides an extremely efficient way to find periods.

All of the above is of considerable practical importance, because the great difficulty in factoring such a product—where the two enormous prime numbers are typically each several hundred digits long—is the basis for the security of the most widely used encryption scheme (called RSA [1] encryption) for protecting private information sent over the internet. In 1994 Peter Shor discovered [2] that a quantum computer would be super-efficient at period finding and thereby pose a potential threat to innumerable secrets. Whence the explosion of interest in developing quantum computation. The threat is only potential because no quantum computer capable of anything like serious period finding currently exists.

I suspect the emphasis has been put on factoring rather than period finding because factoring is more famously associated with RSA code breaking, although, as it happens, period finding can be used directly to crack the RSA code, without any need for a detour into factoring.

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Why Quark Rhymes with Pork
And Other Scientific Diversions
, pp. 195 - 200
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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