Forum für Wissenschaft, Industrie und Wirtschaft
Hauptsponsoren:     Siemens  n-tv 
Datenbankrecherche:

Fachgebiet (optional):

 

Home Fachgebiete Physik Astronomie Nachricht

NIST Demonstrates ‘Universal’ Programmable Quantum Processor

nächste Meldung
20.11.2009

Physicists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have demonstrated the first “universal” programmable quantum information processor able to run any program allowed by quantum mechanics—the rules governing the submicroscopic world—using two quantum bits (qubits) of information.

Anzeige

The processor could be a module in a future quantum computer, which theoretically could solve some important problems that are intractable today.


The NIST demonstration, described in Nature Physics,* marks the first time any research group has moved beyond demonstrating individual tasks for a quantum processor—as done previously at NIST and elsewhere—to perform programmable processing, combining enough inputs and continuous steps to run any possible two-qubit program.

“This is the first time anyone has demonstrated a programmable quantum processor for more than one qubit,” says NIST postdoctoral researcher David Hanneke, first author of the paper. “It’s a step toward the big goal of doing calculations with lots and lots of qubits. The idea is you’d have lots of these processors, and you’d link them together.

The NIST processor stores binary information (1s and 0s) in two beryllium ions (electrically charged atoms), which are held in an electromagnetic trap and manipulated with ultraviolet lasers. Two magnesium ions in the trap help cool the beryllium ions.

NIST scientists can manipulate the states of each beryllium qubit, including placing the ions in a “superposition” of both 1 and 0 values at the same time, a significant potential advantage of information processing in the quantum world. Scientists also can “entangle” the two qubits, a quantum phenomenon that links the pair’s properties even when the ions are physically separated.

The NIST team performed 160 different processing routines on the two qubits. Although there are an infinite number of possible two-qubit programs, this set of 160 is large and diverse enough to fairly represent them, Hanneke says, making the processor “universal.” The researchers used a random number generator to select the particular routines that would be executed, so all possible programs had an equal chance of selection. The random programs avoided the possibility of bias in testing the processor in the event that some programs ran better or produced more accurate outputs than others. Each program operated accurately an average of 79 percent of the time across 900 runs, each run lasting about 37 milliseconds. To evaluate the processor and the quality of its operation, NIST scientists compared the measured outputs of the programs to idealized, theoretical results.

The programs did not perform easily described mathematical calculations. Rather, they involved various single-qubit “rotations” and two-qubit entanglements. As an example of a rotation, if a qubit is envisioned as a dot on a sphere at the north pole for 0, at the south pole for 1, or on the equator for a balanced superposition of 0 and 1, the dot might be rotated to a different point on the sphere, perhaps from the northern to the southern hemisphere, making it more of a 1 than a 0.

If they can be built, quantum computers have many possible applications such as breaking today’s most widely used encryption codes, such as those that protect electronic financial transactions. In addition to its possible use as a module of a quantum computer, the new processor might be used as a miniature simulator for interactions in any quantum system that employs two energy levels, such as the two-level ion qubit systems that represent energy levels as 0s and 1s. Large quantum simulators could, for example, help explain the mystery of high-temperature superconductivity, the transmission of electricity with zero resistance at temperatures that may be practical for efficient storage and distribution of electric power.

The research was supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, National Security Agency, and Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity.

For more details, read the NIST Nov. 14 news release “NIST Demonstrates ‘Universal’ Programmable Quantum Processor for Quantum Computers.”

* D. Hanneke, J.P. Home, J.D. Jost, J.M. Amini, D. Leibfried and D.J. Wineland. Realization of a programmable two-qubit quantum processor. Nature Physics. Posted online Nov. 15.

Laura Ost | Quelle: Newswise Science News
Weitere Informationen: www.nist.gov

nächste Meldung

Weitere Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Physik Astronomie:

nachricht International Team of Scientists Reports Discovery of a New Planet
18.03.2010 | University of California - Santa Barbara

nachricht Astronomers Discover Most Primitive Supermassive Black Holes Known
18.03.2010 | University of Arizona

Alle Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Physik Astronomie >>>

Anzeige

B2B Suche

Produkt / Dienstleistung
Firma / Organisation

Anzeige

Aktuell

Neue Impulse für den Schutz des Wattenmeeres

18.03.2010 | Ökologie Umwelt- Naturschutz

Prior Herbicide Use—Not Irrigation—is Critical to Herbicide Efficacy

18.03.2010 | Agrar- Forstwissenschaften

Stammzellnetzwerke im Zebrafisch

18.03.2010 | Biowissenschaften Chemie

Innovations Report TV
Reportagen, Interviews und
Video-Highlights auf:

www.innovations-report.tv

... in Kooperation mit
Science-TV & Inventions-TV
VideoLinks
B2B-VideoLinks
Weitere VideoLinks >>>

Veranstaltungen

World Sleep Day March 19

18.03.2010 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

"Biogasaufbereitung zu Biomethan" - Internationale Konferenz des Fraunhofer IWES

18.03.2010 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Internationale Tagung zur solaren Energiewandlung - Fortschritte für photovoltaische Systeme

18.03.2010 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Live-Mitschnitte, Interviews und Hintergründe von den Meinungs-
führern aus Politik und Wirtschaft jetzt auf www.euroforum.tv

FindAndHelp