QUANTUM COMPUTERS

The theory of quantum computing was first introduced by Richard Feynman. A quantum computer exploits the particle-wave duality of matter and energy to perform operations on data. Quantum properties are used to represent data and to manipulate that data. Quantum computers can solve certain problems much faster than traditional computers. The foundation of a quantum computer is the qubit, which has the encoded quantum properties of an atom. This is fundamentally different from a traditional computer, which uses bits to store data.
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If quantum computing is ever going to become the standard, we need to develop better ways to control qubits, or quantum bits. Usually, the spin of these itty-bitty quantum computer building blocks is controlled with magnetic fields. Understandably, it’s hard to get this action to take place on a chip such as one would find in a computer. Now, a team of scientists at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at Delft University of Technology and Eindhoven University of Technology have come up with a way to manipulate qubits with electrical fields for the first time ever.

Qubits, like standard computer bits, can be in either a “0″ or a “1″ state. In qubits, the state is determined by the direction of the electron’s spin: spinning in one direction indicates a “0″ state while spinning in the other direction denotes the “1″ state. Figuring out how to spin the electrons with electricity rather than static is an important step forward in the development of super-fast quantum computers. But the team’s incredible advances don’t stop there: they also figured out how to embed the spinning qubits into super-tiny semiconductor nanowires, another important development in the race to build the mind-blowingly fast computers of the future.

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The bit that makes quantum mechanics useful in computers just happens to be what makes it so weird. It’s also why you can have it both ways, for a little while anyhow. It’s all to do with states of being. In quantum mechanics, particles (like electrons and photons) can exist in one state or another, or in two states at the same time. That means that different things about those particles can be true at once. For example, if you’re trying to work out the flight path of a photon or particular properties of an electron, you can’t – different answers are true at the same time. At least, that is, until you look at it. That’s because when you check to see what the final answer is, you force the particle to pick a definite state and all the other states vanish, never to come back.

Regular computers put things in states too. Everything you’ve got on a computer is made out of bits, which are just zeros and ones. Nothing else – each bit is one or the other. It’s called binary code. A computer combines bits of binary to store things in memory and moves them around to do calculations. This is where the researchers hope to bring the freaky particles of quantum mechanics into play. If a computer could work in a quantum way, then a bit could be a zero and a one at the same time!

That state of being both at the same time is called superposition, and you’d only need to use a small number of particles in superposition to work with a lot of information. Only 1000 particles could store all the numbers from 1 to – well, it won’t fit on this page but it’s about 300 digits long. Manipulate your particles with a few well-placed lasers and hang on tight, because you’re quantum computing my friend.
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Faster quantum computers
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For a quantum computer to solve important problems that are intractable today, the information carried by many quantum bits, or qubits, needs to be moved around in the processor. With ion qubits, this can be accomplished by physically moving the ions. In the past, moving ions took much longer than the duration of logic operations on the ions. Now these timescales are nearly equivalent. This reduces processing overhead, making it possible to move ions and prepare them for reuse much faster than before.

NIST researchers cooled trapped ions to their lowest quantum energy state of motion and, in separate experiments, transported one and two ions across hundreds of microns in a multi-zone trap. Rapid acceleration excites the ions’ oscillatory motion, which is undesirable, but researchers controlled the deceleration well enough to return the ions to their original quantum state when they came to a stop. A research group from Mainz, Germany, reports similar results.

The secret to the speed and control is custom electronics. NIST researcher Ryan Bowler used fast FPGA (field programmable gate array) technology to program the voltage levels and durations applied to various electrodes in the ion trap. The smooth voltage supply can move the ions very fast while also keeping them from getting too excited.

With advances in precision control, researchers think ions could be transported even more quickly and yet still return to their original quantum states when they stop. Researchers must also continue to work on the many practical challenges, such as suppressing unwanted heating of the ion motion from noisy electric fields in the environment.

The research is supported by the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity, National Security Agency, Office of Naval Research, and Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
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next goal is to combine pairs of quantum bits to create a two-qubit logic gate — the basic processing unit of a quantum computer.

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Quantum computing has made significant advances in recent years, but issues of cost and complexity have kept it mainly in the realm of research. A newly proposed system from a group of Air Force and Florida Atlantic University researchers isn’t likely to make quantum computing go mainstream, but it could bring the cost of building such systems down because it could use off-the-shelf components. The system would use photons in place of electrons, but photons don’t easily interact with each other and so don’t yield up useful information easily. The traditional fix is to use a tool called an inteferometer to manipulate the photons, but that solution is relatively expensive and the tools themselves are finicky — to say nothing of the fact that it requires “cascades” of them to build a quantum computer that utilizes photons.

The proposed solution is to simply transfer the work done by the inteferometer to a hologram permanently encoded on a pane of “OptiGrate” glass. It would solve the issue of having to calibrate inteferometers, but it would also remove that option entirely as the holograms would be unchangeable on the glass. In other words, the programming would have to be hard-coded. That doesn’t mean that a quantum computer built using this method couldn’t be useful for certain tasks like quantum error correction, but it does mean that it would be difficult to scale as the panes of glass would have to be rather large to carry out anything beyond “low-dimensional quantum computations” — though stacking the holographic plates could help.

The researchers say they are “well along in understanding these devices from a theoretical perspective,” but unfortunately there aren’t any prototypes built yet. Still, the system described here would be “resistant to environmental factors” and less expensive, so hopefully a prototype won’t be too far off…
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In life, most people try to avoid entanglement, be it with unsavory characters or alarmingly large balls of twine. In the quantum world, entanglement is a necessary step for the super-fast quantum computers of the future.
According to a study published by Nature today, physicists have successfully entangled 10 billion quantum bits, otherwise known qubits. But the most significant part of the research is where the entanglement happened–in silicon–because, given that most of modern-day computing is forged in the smithy of silicon technology, this means that researchers may have an easier time incorporating quantum computers into our current gadgets.
Quantum entanglement occurs when the quantum state of one particle is linked to the quantum state of another particle, so that you can’t measure one particle without also influencing the other. With this particular study, led by John Morton at the University of Oxford, UK, the researchers aligned the spins of electrons and phosphorus nuclei–that is, the particles were entangled.
“The key to generating entanglement was to first align all the spins by using high magnetic fields and low temperatures,” said Oxford’s Stephanie Simmons, who also worked on the team…. “Once this has been achieved, the spins can be made to interact with each other using carefully timed microwave and radiofrequency pulses in order to create the entanglement, and then prove that it has been made.” [Reuters]
If the current entanglement experiment were a cooking recipe, it would go something like this: First, embed a silicon crystal with 10 billion phosphorous atoms, cool it to close to absolute zero, and then apply a sequence of radio and microwave pulses. These pulses essentially toy with the spins of the phosphorus nuclei and their electrons until the spin of each nucleus matched the spin of one of its electrons. You end up with 10 billion entangled pairs that form a two-qubit system. It’s a major breakthrough, but the researchers aren’t stopping there:
“Creating 10 billion entangled pairs in silicon with high fidelity is an important step forward for us,” said John Morton of Britain’s Oxford University, who led the team…. We now need to deal with the challenge of coupling these pairs together to build a scalable quantum computer in silicon.” [Reuters]
Spinning particles are all well and nice, but what do they have to do with computing? How does a quantum computer actually compute?
To turn this into a silicon quantum computer, the team must create a “huge 2D grid of entanglement”, in which nuclei are entangled with other phosphorus nuclei, as well as electrons, says Morton. To achieve this, electrons will be shuttled through the structure, stitching entangled states together like a thread, he says. By measuring the electron spins in a certain order, computations could be performed. [New Scientist]
Such a quantum computer would run silicon circles around conventional ones. Unlike the device sitting on your desk, quantum computers aren’t limited by the 0′s and 1′s of binary bits. In the weird world of quantum mechanics, particles can exist in more that one state at a time–they can be placed in a “superposition” of several possible states. That means that the qubits in a quantum computer could hold several different values simultaneously.
It has been shown theoretically that by running calculations in parallel, using many quantum states in superposition, a quantum computer could solve problems that would take a classical computer an infinite amount of time, for example, running Shor’s algorithm, which factors large numbers into primes and could be used, for example, to crack the most powerful encryption algorithms on the Internet. [Nature News]
In short, a quantum computer would generate a computing power the likes of which the world has never seen, capable of running–as well as cracking–evermore complex algorithms.
While impressed by the quantum leaps made by this research, scientists are already considering the next hurdles in the quantum computing story.
“It’s nice, impressive work,” says Jeremy O’Brien, a quantum-computing specialist at the University of Bristol, UK. But what is really needed, he says, is the ability to do the additional nanofabrication to put electrodes on the silicon chip to address each individual nucleus and electron pair, a technology that will be needed to get more than two spins entangled together in silicon. “That would be really impressive,” he says. [Nature News]
Even though quantum computers have a ways to go before they wind up in your living room and in your every-day gadgets, thanks to successful silicon entanglement that day is getting closer.
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http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110119/full/news.2011.29.html

http://scienceblogs.com/pontiff/2008/08/21/selfcorrecting-quantum-compute/

http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2011/nov/04/silicon-carbide-shows-promise-for-quantum-computing
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v479/n7371/full/nature10562.html

http://advanced-level-ict.blogspot.in/2011/10/quantum-computers-at-nano-scale.html
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IF A ‘DNA COMPUTER’ DID ALREADY EXIST, THEN WE SHOULD BE ABLE TO REBUILD IT!
Everybody loves gadgets. If the DNA molecule DID function as a super-advanced computer chip, then it would use simple, everyday principles of physics to work.

There would be nothing mysterious or impossible about it.

Ultimately it would be just a little machine, waiting to be analyzed and understood.
If that were the case, then we also should be able to discover the principles of this ‘computer’ and reverse-engineer it… so we can build gadgets and gizmos!

The earliest gadgets would obviously be much, much simpler than the DNA molecule… using only the most basic aspects of the ‘technology.’ Nonetheless they would work on similar principles.

HOW WOULD WE DO IT?

The DNA molecule is built up from single atoms that arrange into a double helix.

The ultimate “proof of concept” for our seemingly radical idea would be for scientists to design a computer circuit — out of nothing more than single atoms!

Now think of a catchy name for it. How about a “quantum computer?”

Fiction?

Fact!http://go.webassistant.com/wa/upload/users/u1001065/pages/0609-848564437digGNU7QCLo/dna3.html
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Now we’re in the second quarter century of Quantum Computing. “It is widely believed that a quantum computer will not become a reality for at least another 25 years,” says Professor Jeremy O’Brien, Director of the Centre for Quantum Photonics. “However, we believe, using our new [photon quantum random walk] technique, a quantum computer could, in less than ten years, be performing calculations that are outside the capabilities of conventional computers.”>>http://hplusmagazine.com/2010/09/21/new-route-quantum-computing-photons-quantum-walk-your-future/


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_computer
http://news.discovery.com/tech/nobel-physics-quantum-computers-121009.html
http://blogs.economictimes.indiatimes.com/Sigma/entry/the-india-bit-in-quantum-computing
http://www.newscientist.com/topic/quantum-world
http://phys.org/physics-news/quantum-physics/


Serge Haroche, David Wineland win 2012 Nobel Prize for Physics

http://www.ndtv.com/article/view/world/277409?device=mobile

Serge Haroche, David Wineland win 2012
Nobel Prize for Physics

Stockholm: Serge Haroche of France and David Wineland of the US won the NobelPrize on Tuesday for work in quantum
physics that could one day open the way to revolutionary computers.

The pair were honoured for pioneering optical experiments in “measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems,” the Nobel Physics jury said in its
citation.

“Their groundbreaking methods have enabled this field of research to take the very first steps towards building a new type of super-fast computer based on quantum physics,” it said.

“Perhaps the quantum computer will change our everyday lives in this century in the same radical way as the classical computer did in the last century.”

The research has also led to the
construction of extremely precise clocks
that could become the future basis for a
new standard of time, with more than
hundred-fold greater precision than
present-day caesium clocks, it said.
Haroche, 68, said the award was “fairly
overwhelming.”
“I was in the street, passing near a bench,
and was able to sit down immediately,” he
told journalists via a live link to Stockholm.
“I was walking with my wife, when I saw
the Swedish area code, I realized.”
“I think we will have champagne,” he
added.
The two scientists specialise in quantum
entanglement, a phenomenon of particle
physics that has been proven by
experiments but remains poorly
understood.
When two particles interact, they become
“entangled,” which means one particle
affects the other at a distance. The
connection lasts long after they are
separated.
In entanglement, particles also go into a
state called superposition, which opens the
way to a hoped-for supercomputers.
Today’s computers use a binary code, in
which data is stored in a bit that could be
either zero or 1.
But in superposition, a quantum bit,
known as a qubit, could be either zero or
one, or both zero and one at the same
time.
This potentially offers a massive increase
in data storage, greatly helping number-
crunching tasks such as running climate-
change models and breaking encrypted
codes.
But many technical hurdles remain to be
overcome.
Haroche and Wineland’s achievement has
been to measure and control these very
fragile quantum states, which were
previously deemed inaccessible, so that the
particles can be observed and counted, the
jury said.
Haroche is a professor at College de
France and Ecole Normale Superieure in
Paris, while Wineland, 68, is a group
leader at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology and the
University of Colorado in Boulder,
Colorado.
On Monday, Shinya Yamanaka of Japan
and John Gurdon of Britain won the Nobel
Medicine Prize for work in cell
programming, a frontier that has raised
dreams of replacement tissue for people
crippled by disease.
The Nobel prize announcements continue
on Wednesday with the announcement of
the chemistry prize, followed by the
literature prize on Thursday.
Perhaps the most-watched award, for
peace, will be announced Friday and the
economics prize will wind up the Nobel
season on October 15.
The laureates will receive their prizes at
formal ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo
on December 10, the anniversary of prize
founder Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896.
The Nobel Foundation has slashed its prize
sum to eight million Swedish kronor ($1.2
million, 930,000 euros) per award, from
the 10 million kronor awarded since 2001,
due to the economic crisis.

Serge Haroche, David Wineland win 2012 Nobel Prize for Physics

http://www.ndtv.com/article/view/world/277409?device=mobile

Serge Haroche, David Wineland win 2012
Nobel Prize for Physics

Stockholm: Serge Haroche of France and David Wineland of the US won the NobelPrize on Tuesday for work in quantum
physics that could one day open the way to revolutionary computers.

image

The pair were honoured for pioneering optical experiments in “measuring and manipulation of individual quantum systems,” the Nobel Physics jury said in its
citation.

“Their groundbreaking methods have enabled this field of research to take the very first steps towards building a new type of super-fast computer based on quantum physics,” it said.

image

“Perhaps the quantum computer will change our everyday lives in this century in the same radical way as the classical computer did in the last century.”

image

The research has also led to the
construction of extremely precise clocks
that could become the future basis for a
new standard of time, with more than
hundred-fold greater precision than
present-day caesium clocks, it said.
Haroche, 68, said the award was “fairly
overwhelming.”
“I was in the street, passing near a bench,
and was able to sit down immediately,” he
told journalists via a live link to Stockholm.
“I was walking with my wife, when I saw
the Swedish area code, I realized.”
“I think we will have champagne,” he
added.
The two scientists specialise in quantum
entanglement, a phenomenon of particle
physics that has been proven by
experiments but remains poorly
understood.
When two particles interact, they become
“entangled,” which means one particle
affects the other at a distance. The
connection lasts long after they are
separated.
In entanglement, particles also go into a
state called superposition, which opens the
way to a hoped-for supercomputers.
Today’s computers use a binary code, in
which data is stored in a bit that could be
either zero or 1.
But in superposition, a quantum bit,
known as a qubit, could be either zero or
one, or both zero and one at the same
time.
This potentially offers a massive increase
in data storage, greatly helping number-
crunching tasks such as running climate-
change models and breaking encrypted
codes.
But many technical hurdles remain to be
overcome.
Haroche and Wineland’s achievement has
been to measure and control these very
fragile quantum states, which were
previously deemed inaccessible, so that the
particles can be observed and counted, the
jury said.
Haroche is a professor at College de
France and Ecole Normale Superieure in
Paris, while Wineland, 68, is a group
leader at the National Institute of
Standards and Technology and the
University of Colorado in Boulder,
Colorado.
On Monday, Shinya Yamanaka of Japan
and John Gurdon of Britain won the Nobel
Medicine Prize for work in cell
programming, a frontier that has raised
dreams of replacement tissue for people
crippled by disease.
The Nobel prize announcements continue
on Wednesday with the announcement of
the chemistry prize, followed by the
literature prize on Thursday.
Perhaps the most-watched award, for
peace, will be announced Friday and the
economics prize will wind up the Nobel
season on October 15.
The laureates will receive their prizes at
formal ceremonies in Stockholm and Oslo
on December 10, the anniversary of prize
founder Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896.
The Nobel Foundation has slashed its prize
sum to eight million Swedish kronor ($1.2
million, 930,000 euros) per award, from
the 10 million kronor awarded since 2001,
due to the economic crisis.