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UW-Madison: Basic
Quantum Computing Circuit Built
March 8, 2010
Exerting delicate
control over a pair of atoms within a mere seven-millionths-of-a-second
window of opportunity, physicists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
created an atomic circuit that may help quantum computing become a
reality.
Quantum computing represents a new paradigm in information processing
that may complement classical computers. Much of the dizzying rate of
increase in traditional computing power has come as transistors shrink
and pack more tightly onto chips — a trend that cannot continue
indefinitely.
"At some point in time you get to the limit where a single transistor
that makes up an electronic circuit is one atom, and then you can no
longer predict how the transistor will work with classical methods,"
explains UW-Madison physics professor Mark Saffman. "You have to use the
physics that describes atoms — quantum mechanics."
At that point, he says, "you open up completely new possibilities for
processing information. There are certain calculational problems... that
can be solved exponentially faster on a quantum computer than on any
foreseeable classical computer."
With fellow physics professor Thad Walker, Saffman successfully used
neutral atoms to create what is known as a controlled-NOT (CNOT) gate, a
basic type of circuit that will be an essential element of any quantum
computer. As described in the Jan. 8 issue of the journal Physical
Review Letters, the work is the first demonstration of a quantum gate
between two uncharged atoms.
The use of neutral atoms rather than charged ions or other materials
distinguishes the achievement from previous work. "The current gold
standard in experimental quantum computing has been set by trapped
ions... People can run small programs now with up to eight ions in
traps," says Saffman.
However, to be useful for computing applications, systems must contain
enough quantum bits, or qubits, to be capable of running long programs
and handling more complex calculations. An ion-based system presents
challenges for scaling up because ions are highly interactive with each
other and their environment, making them difficult to control.
"Neutral atoms have the advantage that in their ground state they don't
talk to each other, so you can put more of them in a small region
without having them interact with each other and cause problems,"
Saffman says. "This is a step forward toward creating larger systems."
The
team used a combination of lasers, extreme cold (a fraction of a degree
above absolute zero), and a powerful vacuum to immobilize two rubidium
atoms within "optical traps." They used another laser to excite the
atoms to a high-energy state to create the CNOT quantum gate between the
two atoms, also achieving a property called entanglement in which the
states of the two atoms are linked such that measuring one provides
information about the other.
Writing in the same journal issue, another team also entangled neutral
atoms but without the CNOT gate. Creating the gate is advantageous
because it allows more control over the states of the atoms, Saffman
says, as well as demonstrating a fundamental aspect of an eventual
quantum computer.
The Wisconsin group is now working toward arrays of up to 50 atoms to
test the feasibility of scaling up their methods. They are also looking
for ways to link qubits stored in atoms with qubits stored in light with
an eye toward future communication applications, such as "quantum
internets."
This work was funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, the
Army Research Office and the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects
Agency. |