Matter News
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to MatterNews.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Dancing droplets 11/21/2008

'Enlightened' atoms stage nano-riot againsts uniformity 11/20/2008

'Firefly' cubesat to study link between lightning and terrestrial gamma ray flashes 11/19/2008

Putting a new spin on current research 11/16/2008

Cold atoms could replace hot gallium in focused ion beams 11/15/2008

Iron-based materials may unlock superconductivity’s secrets 11/14/2008

Stretching silicon: A new method to measure how strain affects semiconductors 11/11/2008

The inaudible symphony analyzed 11/10/2008

Physicists create BlackMax to search for dimensions in space at the Large Hadron Collider 11/10/2008

Ultrafast lasers give CU-Boulder researchers a snapshot of electrons in action 11/9/2008

Very cold ice films in laboratory reveal mysteries of universe 11/8/2008

Electron pairs precede high-temperature superconductivity 11/7/2008

New spaceship force field makes Mars trip possible 11/4/2008

Searching for primordial antimatter 10/31/2008

New process promises bigger, better diamond crystals 10/29/2008

Fast quantum computer building block created (8/24/2008)

Tags:
quantum computing

The fastest quantum computer bit that exploits the main advantage of the qubit over the conventional bit has been demonstrated by researchers at University of Michigan, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory and the University of California at San Diego.

The scientists used lasers to create an initialized quantum state of this solid-state qubit at rates of about a gigahertz, or a billion times per second. They can also use lasers to achieve fundamental steps toward programming it.

A conventional bit can be a 0 or a 1. A quantum bit, or qubit, can be both at the same time. Until now, scientists couldn't stabilize that duality.

Physics professor Duncan Steel, doctoral student Xiaodong Xu and their colleagues used lasers to coherently, or stably, trap the spin of one electron confined in a single semiconductor quantum dot. A quantum dot is like a transistor in a conventional computer.

The scientists trapped the spin in a dark state in which they can arbitrarily adjust the amount of 0 and 1 the qubit represents. They call this state "dark" because it does not absorb light. Therefore, light does not cause loss of coherence between the two states. In other words, the light does not destabilize the qubit. A paper on these findings will be published in Nature Physics and is available early in the online edition.

"We are the first to show that you can do this to a single electron in a self-assembled quantum dot," Steel said. "If you're going to do quantum computing, you have to be able to work with one electron at a time."

Spin is an intrinsic property of the electron that isn't a real rotation. Steel compares it to the magnetic poles. Electrons are said to have spin up or down. In quantum computing, the up and down directions represent the 0s and 1s of conventional computing.

Steel's approach to developing a quantum computer is to use ultrafast lasers to manipulate arrays of semiconductor quantum dots, each containing one electron. Quantum logic gates are formed by quantum mechanical interactions between the dots.

Previously in Steel's lab, researchers have used a laser to produce an electron in a state representative of a 1 or a 0 and a small amount of the other state. Now, using two laser frequencies, they have trapped it as a 0 and a 1 at the same time, and they can adjust the amount of each.

Because the electron is trapped in a dark state, applied light can't destroy the coherence. Energy from light can flip the spin of electrons, or quantum bits, which would jumble any information being stored in the bit.

"This dark state is a place where information can be stored without any error," Steel said.

Because of their ability to represent multiple states simultaneously, quantum computers could theoretically factor numbers dramatically faster and with smaller computers than conventional computers. For this reason, they could vastly improve computer security.

"The National Security Agency has said that based on our present technology, we have about a 20-year window of security," Steel said. "That means if we sent up a satellite today, it would take somebody about 20 years to crack the code. Quantum computers will let you develop a code that would be impossible to crack with a conventional computer."

Physicists achieved this by using two continuous wave lasers.

Steel is the Robert J. Hiller Professor of Engineering in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science as well as a professor in the Physics Department. Xu, a doctoral student in Physics, is first author of the Nature Physics paper. Steel is also an author. The principal investigators include Dan Gammon of the Naval Research Laboratory and physics professor Lu Jeu Sham at the University of California at San Diego.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Michigan

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2009 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.