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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Essential reading but confusing in places,
By A Customer
This review is from: Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge Series on Information and the Natural Sciences) (Paperback)
First of all, this book is probably an essential requirement for a course on quantum computing. It is very comprehensive. However there are times when the authors write in a very confusing way. One of the weakest areas of the book concerns measurement. There is no discussion of the topic of how one can measure a single qubit in a multi-qubit state. In a classical system one can just measure the voltage on a single wire. In a quantum system it is more complex. This is FUNDAMENTAL but the authors do not explain this properly. As I read the book I was always asking questions that I found that the book didn't consider. The book has plenty of exercises however none have answers and there are very few really telling examples. This makes the students' life very difficult. My advice if you buy this book is be prepared to spend a considerable amount of time to it and also be prepared to read many research papers to try to clarify the many ill defined statements in the book. Using the book as a complement to a taught course is the wisest thing to do. I do not recommend it as a self study text. Don't believe the endorsements on the back cover. They are all written by people who already understand the subject matter so they cannot see what a newcomer might have problems with.
9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Classic text on quantum information, one must read !,
By akpati@sees.bangor.ac.uk (United Kingdom and India) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge Series on Information and the Natural Sciences) (Paperback)
The book of M. Nielsen and I. Chuang is outcome of great work that have been done extensively in the last couple of decades by quantum physicists, computer scientist and information theorist. It is a right effort in right direction, so it is highly appreciable. Starting from rules of quantum theory these authors explain how can one apply these concepts in designing logic gates, elementary quantum computer circuits, Deustch-Josza algorithm Shor's algorithm, Grover's algorithm and many more. Also this text book explains in detail the important ideas of quantum information theory, such as no-cloning theorem, coding theorem, quantum teleportation, dense coding, and so on. There is also balance between technical aspects of the theory and historical aspects of the subjects. This book contains extensive number of references for further study. I am sure this book will be extremely useful for students as well as researchers in the field. I recomend that every one who is interested to know the wonder rules of quantum computation and information should read this book seriously.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best!,
By Palle E T Jorgensen "Palle Jorgensen" (Iowa City, Iowa United States) - See all my reviews (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Quantum Computation and Quantum Information (Cambridge Series on Information and the Natural Sciences) (Paperback)
It is not easy for authors to make everyone happy;-- this is especially so in a new field,--one which has grabbed headlines, and one which is at the same time interdisiplinary. In this case, the authors succeed as well as anyone, I believe.-- This lovely book covers several of the appropriate areas of physics (quantum theory, (some) experiment...), of computer science (the mathematical side of the subject), and of math (operators in Hilbert space, and the theory of algorithms);-- each member of the particular scientific specialty has very definite ideas of his/her own subject,-- and that of the others. Nonetheless, in this readers opinion, the two authors did a great job;-- they explain math to the physics community,-- and they sucessfully teach quantum theory and theoretical CS to mathematicians. The book is suitable for grad students: has lots of great exercises, but it could perhaps have used some more worked examples. (Fortunately they can be found in other books on quantum computation.) The Nielsen-Chuang book is most certainly a great entry for students into this exciting new subject. There are other books,-- but they, for the most part, take a more narrow view. The material in Nielsen-Chuang is timeless,-- and I expect the book will also be popular ten years from now.
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