379,483 research outputs found
Quantum Computing in Molecular Magnets
Shor and Grover demonstrated that a quantum computer can outperform any
classical computer in factoring numbers and in searching a database by
exploiting the parallelism of quantum mechanics. Whereas Shor's algorithm
requires both superposition and entanglement of a many-particle system, the
superposition of single-particle quantum states is sufficient for Grover's
algorithm. Recently, the latter has been successfully implemented using Rydberg
atoms. Here we propose an implementation of Grover's algorithm that uses
molecular magnets, which are solid-state systems with a large spin; their spin
eigenstates make them natural candidates for single-particle systems. We show
theoretically that molecular magnets can be used to build dense and efficient
memory devices based on the Grover algorithm. In particular, one single crystal
can serve as a storage unit of a dynamic random access memory device. Fast
electron spin resonance pulses can be used to decode and read out stored
numbers of up to 10^5, with access times as short as 10^{-10} seconds. We show
that our proposal should be feasible using the molecular magnets Fe8 and Mn12.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, PDF, version published in Nature, typos
correcte
DNA Computation Based Approach for Enhanced Computing Power
DNA computing is a discipline that aims at harnessing individual molecules at the nano-scopic level for computational purposes. Computation with DNA molecules possesses an inherent interest for researchers in computers and biology. Given its vast parallelism and high-density storage, DNA computing approaches are employed to solve many problems. DNA has also been explored as an excellent material and a fundamental building block for building large-scale nanostructures, constructing individual nano-mechanical devices, and performing computations. Molecular-scale autonomous programmable computers are demonstrated allowing both input and output information to be in molecular form. This paper presents a review of recent advancements in DNA computing and presents major achievements and challenges for researchers in the coming future
Quantum computing of molecular magnet Mn
Quantum computation in molecular magnets is studied by solving the
time-dependent Schr\"{o}dinger equation numerically. Following Leuenberger and
Loss (Nature (London) 410, 789(2001)), an external oscillating magnetic field
is applied to populate and manipulate the spin coherent states in molecular
magnet Mn. The conditions to realize parallel recording and reading data
bases of Grover algorithsm in molecular magnets are discussed in details. It is
found that an accurate duration time of magnetic pulse as well as the
amplitudes are required to design the device of quantum computing.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
Parallel computing and molecular dynamics of biological membranes
In this talk I discuss the general question of the portability of Molecular
Dynamics codes for diffusive systems on parallel computers of the APE family.
The intrinsic single precision arithmetics of the today available APE platforms
does not seem to affect the numerical accuracy of the simulations, while the
absence of integer addressing from CPU to individual nodes puts strong
constraints on the possible programming strategies. Liquids can be very
satisfactorily simulated using the "systolic" method. For more complex systems,
like the biological ones at which we are ultimately interested in, the "domain
decomposition" approach is best suited to beat the quadratic growth of the
inter-molecular computational time with the number of elementary components of
the system. The promising perspectives of using this strategy for extensive
simulations of lipid bilayers are briefly reviewed.Comment: 4 pages LaTeX, 2 figures included, espcrc2.sty require
Computing the local pressure in molecular dynamics simulations
Computer simulations of inhomogeneous soft matter systems often require
accurate methods for computing the local pressure. We present a simple
derivation, based on the virial relation, of two equivalent expressions for the
local (atomistic) pressure in a molecular dynamics simulation. One of these
expressions, previously derived by other authors via a different route,
involves summation over interactions between particles within the region of
interest; the other involves summation over interactions across the boundary of
the region of interest. We illustrate our derivation using simulations of a
simple osmotic system; both expressions produce accurate results even when the
region of interest over which the pressure is measured is very small.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Massively parallel computing on an organic molecular layer
Current computers operate at enormous speeds of ~10^13 bits/s, but their
principle of sequential logic operation has remained unchanged since the 1950s.
Though our brain is much slower on a per-neuron base (~10^3 firings/s), it is
capable of remarkable decision-making based on the collective operations of
millions of neurons at a time in ever-evolving neural circuitry. Here we use
molecular switches to build an assembly where each molecule communicates-like
neurons-with many neighbors simultaneously. The assembly's ability to
reconfigure itself spontaneously for a new problem allows us to realize
conventional computing constructs like logic gates and Voronoi decompositions,
as well as to reproduce two natural phenomena: heat diffusion and the mutation
of normal cells to cancer cells. This is a shift from the current static
computing paradigm of serial bit-processing to a regime in which a large number
of bits are processed in parallel in dynamically changing hardware.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
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