Researchers Develop Quantum Processor

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20060113/bs_nf/40876

Researchers Develop Quantum Processor

A computer chip based on the esoteric science of quantum mechanics has been created by researchers at the University of Michigan. The chip might well pave the way for a new generation of supercomputers.

Employing the same semiconductor-fabrication techniques used to create common computer chips, the Michigan team was able to trap a single atom within an integrated chip and control it using electrical signals.

Two Places at Once

As of yet, the technology is not applicable to typical desktop PCs or servers, but quantum computers are said to be promising because they can solve complicated problems using massively parallel computing.

That is accomplished by the quirky nature of quantum mechanics, said Christopher Monroe, a physics professor and the principal investigator and co-author of the paper "Ion Trap in a Semiconductor Chip." He explained that that chips can process multiple inputs at the same time in the same device.

"With quantum mechanics, an object can be in two places at the same time, as long as you don't look at it," he said. The quantum computer architecture can store quantum bits (qubits) of information, where each qubit can hold the numbers one or zero, or even both digits simultaneously.

When a qubit is added to a quantum system, the computing power doubles. Thus, the quantum machine can crunch numbers at a rate that is exponentially faster than conventional processors, said Monroe.

New Spin on Semiconductors

Electrically charged atoms (ions) for such quantum computers are stored in traps in order to isolate the qubits, a process that is essential for the system to work.

The challenge is that current ion traps can hold only a few atoms, or qubits, and are not easily scaled, making it difficult to create a quantum chip that can store thousands or more atomic ions. A string of such atoms, in theory, could store thousands of bits of information.

In the chip created at Michigan, which is the size of a postage stamp, the ion is confined in a trap while electric fields are applied. Laser light puts a spin on the ion's free electron, enabling it to flip it between the one or zero quantum states.

The spin of the electron dictates the value of the qubit. For example, an up-spin can represent a one, or a down-spin can represent a zero -- or the qubit can occupy both states simultaneously.

Applications for Cryptography

The quantum processor is made of gallium arsenide in a layered structure and etched with electrodes using the same type of lithography process as those used to create today's computer chips. Each electrode is connected to a separate voltage supply, and these various electrical voltages control the ion by moving as it hovers in a space carved out of the chip.

The next step is to build a bigger chip with many more electrodes, so that it can store more ions. There still is a lot of work to be done to learn how to control lots of ions in one of these chips. It won't be nearly as easy as it was with conventional computer chips, but at least we know what to do in principle, Monroe said.

"This type of integrated chip structure is significant because it demonstrates a way to scale the quantum computer to bigger systems," Monroe said. "It has applications for processing very large [data sets] such as in cryptography, for example, and there is a lot of interest in this by the government."
 
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Obviously, so you could read the article/news immediately when you click on the thread. Some user might not want to open a new browser. If you wanted to know the source, I provided the link - which is secondary.
 
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Yes, thanks for going to te effort of presenting whatlink was saying. that is the right way to present stuff here. i always try to do it anyhow

say one buys a normal computer. and then quantum computers happen. can one upgrade an average computer to quantum.....?? or is it money down the grid in the techno-fast-change world
 
Did not IBM some years ago developed a 4 qubit computer and was working on a 8 qubit? Looks like nothing came out of it...or is NSA using it to spy on billions of people?
 
"With quantum mechanics, an object can be in two places at the same time, as long as you don't look at it,"

That seriously sounds like something from the Onion....I mean that just sounds like a joke! I can't believe this is something that's going to be possible....bizarre.
 
"With quantum mechanics, an object can be in two places at the same time, as long as you don't look at it,"

That seriously sounds like something from theonion.com....I mean that just sounds like a joke! I can't believe this is something that's going to be possible....bizarre.
 
i thought we were a good couple years away from that technology! oh well, it's not a completely nanotech processor, so i don't see why it's not realistic. awesome!
 
Can such a processor rely on only one ion space, but somehow swap out ions inside that space and examine the individual bitwise charge of a selected given ion? The quantum processor could end up no larger than a few molecules like that. Oops wrong era. Forgot this is early in the century. :p
 
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