NationStates Jolt Archive


Germans demo working quantum register

LuSiD
12-10-2004, 20:30
The Register (http://www.theregister.com) wrote:

By Lucy Sherriff
Published Monday 11th October 2004 13:29 GMT

Physicists at the University of Bonn have successfully demonstrated a five-qubit quantum register, using neutral atoms.

Registers are the central memory of a computer, in which information is stored in 1s and 0s. Neutral atoms are considered natural candidates for building a register because they can exist in an abundance of quantum states, and these individual states can be manipulated relatively simply. (Not to mention the fact that they can be counted – quite a useful property, when building a register.)

In Physical Review Letters, the researchers explain how they set up the register experimentally. You can access their paper here (http://arxiv.org/pdf/quant-ph/0409037).

The team cooled five caesium atoms until they were almost stationary, and then loaded them into an optical lattice. An optical lattice is a light grid created by the interference of two or more laser beams. More poetically, it can be thought of as an "artificial crystal of light" (http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/17/4/7). In this particular case, the researchers loaded the atoms on to a so-called standing wave trap.

This lattice can trap the neutral atoms in potential wells because the electric fields of the lasers induce a dipole moment in the atom. Depending on the frequency of this dipole moment, and the frequency of the electric field, an atom will either be pushed into the areas of maximum light intensity, or into the areas of minimum light intensity.

Once the atoms were loaded onto the grid, the team initialised the register, that is, they set all the atoms to the state corresponding with 0 (zero). The team took photographs of the atoms in their potential wells using an intensified CCD camera. Then, using a polarised laser, the team performed an operation known as a spin-flip on two of the atoms, switching them to the state corresponding to 1.

Next, the team bombarded the array with a laser tuned to the state-0 atoms, to check that the information had genuinely been transferred to the register. The laser knocked the state-0 atoms off the carrier wave, leaving the state-1 atoms behind. Another picture from their CCD imaging system shows the state-1 atoms are exactly where they were at the beginning of the experiment.

The team is now working to create a quantum gate in which two or more qubits of the register will interact in a controlled way. Dominik Schrader, the lead scientist, he hopes to get there in two years. ®

Source: The Register (http://www.theregister.com/2004/10/11/qubits_register/).. More related information availabble in the article,, and on Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org).
Tuesday Heights
12-10-2004, 20:52
I don't understand... layman's terms, anyone?
Superpower07
12-10-2004, 21:03
Wow - and I barely even understood that
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 21:41
Eeeehhhh.......cool. Why do they want to create a quantum gate?(what is a quantum gate?) And what is it used for? Space travel?
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 21:51
Well?
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 22:33
Answer me.
LuSiD
12-10-2004, 22:41
Eeeehhhh.......cool. Why do they want to create a quantum gate?(what is a quantum gate?) And what is it used for? Space travel?

Its not easy theory. But in order to understand it, you first have to understand what Quantum is. This is also described on e.g. Wikipedia. Now, if you consider that for Atoms there are other rules than for Quantums, and you understand how and why Atoms limit certain possibilities, then you're indeed thinking in the right direction. (And e.g. Space traveling, going faster than light might be possible by Quantums).

In the relation to Quantum Computing, this would become extremely fast (the maths the computer does) and the register (as explained here above) is a start to get a working Quantum Computer.

I can't explain it well in English, English is not my mother tongue and its hard to translate some terms ad i don't want to spread misinformation. I do advise all to read it in their own language. Far easier :) also see:
* Wikipedia: Quantum Gate (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_gate) and
* Wikipedia: Quantum Computer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_computer)
* Wikipedia: Quantum Mechanics (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics)
Terra - Domina
12-10-2004, 22:46
thats amazing...

I cant wait till they get it up to 16 nodes. It will be so powerful it will be able to upgrade itself!

Quantum gate - equivelent of a logic gate on a normal computer ;)
Isanyonehome
12-10-2004, 22:49
Eeeehhhh.......cool. Why do they want to create a quantum gate?(what is a quantum gate?) And what is it used for? Space travel?


Think quantum LOGIC gate. Logic gates are the basis for making descisions. In this specific case, computers. The smaller the register, the more of them that can be packed into a given space, the faster the computer. The fact that they are using light instead of electricity to switch states also has added efficiencies.
Nadkor
12-10-2004, 22:56
i have no idea what youre talking about :)
Isanyonehome
12-10-2004, 22:56
(And e.g. Space traveling, going faster than light might be possible by Quantums).



Havent scientists already figured out how to pass information faster than the speed of light? Something about the spin of paired particles.

link here
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/releases/2003/47.cfm
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 22:57
Its not easy theory. But in order to understand it, you first have to understand what Quantum is. This is also described on e.g. Wikipedia. Now, if you consider that for Atoms there are other rules than for Quantums, and you understand how and why Atoms limit certain possibilities, then you're indeed thinking in the right direction. (And e.g. Space traveling, going faster than light might be possible by Quantums).

In the relation to Quantum Computing, this would become extremely fast (the maths the computer does) and the register (as explained here above) is a start to get a working Quantum Computer.

I can't explain it well in English, English is not my mother tongue and its hard to translate some terms ad i don't want to spread misinformation. I do advise all to read it in their own language. Far easier :) also see:
* Wikipedia: Quantum Gate (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_gate) and
* Wikipedia: Quantum Computer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_computer)
* Wikipedia: Quantum Mechanics (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics)
Ok. I won't pretend I even understand half of this.(I would feel so smart if I did)
Could you explain it very, very simple? You can choose from 3 languages to do so.
1. German
2. Dutch
3. English
Oh. And this faster then light communication thingy, I thought they already could do that? I remember reading somewhere that a professor at the university of Hamburg managed to , back in 1996 or so, send information from point A to point B at many times the speed of light. Subluminal messaging or something..(Yeah, I know thats something different. But it sounded similar.)
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 22:59
Think quantum LOGIC gate. Logic gates are the basis for making descisions. In this specific case, computers. The smaller the register, the more of them that can be packed into a given space, the faster the computer. The fact that they are using light instead of electricity to switch states also has added efficiencies.
So, it would be like a Pentium 10,000 processor?
Jever Pilsener
12-10-2004, 23:00
thats amazing...

I cant wait till they get it up to 16 nodes. It will be so powerful it will be able to upgrade itself!
Say hello to Skynet.
Chess Squares
12-10-2004, 23:03
So, it would be like a Pentium 10,000 processor?
basically
LuSiD
13-10-2004, 00:24
Ok. I won't pretend I even understand half of this.(I would feel so smart if I did)
Could you explain it very, very simple? You can choose from 3 languages to do so.
1. German
2. Dutch
3. English

U vraagt wij draaien :)

Je hebt dus atomen en moleculen. Eeuwen lang dacht men dat dit de kleinste deeltjes waren die er bestonden. Maar men heeft in theorie (en afgelopen jaren in praktijk) uitgevonden dat ook atomen nog te onderverdelen zijn, in quartz (quantum)

Oh. And this faster then light communication thingy, I thought they already could do that? I remember reading somewhere that a professor at the university of Hamburg managed to , back in 1996 or so, send information from point A to point B at many times the speed of light. Subluminal messaging or something..(Yeah, I know thats something different. But it sounded similar.)

Kan zijn. Alles met Quantum heeft met elkaar te maken. Tot voor kort waren er enorm veel theorien over maar helaas maar weinig praktijk. Dat is de afgelopen laren verandert.

Het onderwerp over registers gaat specifiek over computers. Zoals wordt uitgelegd is een register (voor geheugen) enorm belangrijk voor het functioneren van een computer.

En ja uiteindelijk krijg je dan machines die enorm snel zijn zoals huidige HPC (SGI, IBM, Cray, SUN).