Real-Valued, Continuous-Time Computers: A Model of Analog Computations, Part I
We develop a system of recursive functions on the reals analogous to classical recursion theory on the natural numbers. This system turns out to include many sets and functions that are uncomputable in the traditional sense. <p> These functions can be computed by an idealized computer that runs on continuous states in continous time; however, this computer turns out to be highly unphysical. Looking more closely, we find that we can stratify these functions according to how many idealizations or infinite limits they are away from physical computability. <p> We conclude that, in a certain sense, finite-dimensional analog computation is more powerful than digital computation: however, physically realizable analog computation would seem to be equivalent. Thus the {\it Physical Church-Turing Thesis}, that no physical computer is more powerful than a Turing machine, is false in a perfect, classical world but probably ture in the world we live in.
Year of publication: |
1993-04
|
---|---|
Authors: | Moore, Christopher |
Institutions: | Santa Fe Institute |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Smooth Maps of the Interval and the Real Line Capable of Universal Computation
Moore, Christopher, (1993)
-
Moore, Christopher, (2010)
-
Direction of luxury fashion retailers' post-entry expansion – the evidence from China
Bai, Huifeng, (2020)
- More ...