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Friday September 10, 2004
Writer: Alan Flurry, 706/542-7825, aflurry@uga.edu
Contact: Michael Geller, 706/340-6021,
mgeller@physast.uga.edu
UGA Researcher’s Work Makes Solid Advance
Toward Powerful Quantum Computers
Athens, Ga. – An article in the August 2004 issue of /Physical
Review Letters/ unveils an intriguing proposal for performing quantum
computation with a solid state circuit by using nanomechanical resonators
to couple quantum devices made from superconductors. The article,
authored by Andrew Cleland of the University of California at Santa
Barbara and University of Georgia physicist Michael Geller, describes
their proposal to combine desirable features of both atomic systems
and solid-state electronics to make a large-scale quantum computer.
A quantum computer, if one could be built, would transform information
technology by providing vastly increased computational power for certain
specialized tasks, such as searching databases or breaking codes.
Unlike the transistors in today’s computers, a quantum computer
would be constructed from building blocks that obey the counterintuitive
laws of quantum mechanics, such as that governing an atom or a laser.
Whereas a conventional digital computer processes and stores information
in the form of bits, each bit being a “0” or a “1,”a
quantum computer uses quantum bits, which can be in a “0” or “1” state
or anywhere in between.
“The encryption method used in the financial sector and by
defense departments around the world could be compromised by eavesdroppers
using quantum computers to factor large numbers,” explained
Geller. “That’s why governments are racing to build the
first machine.”
Factoring, which is the process of decomposing an integer into a
product of prime numbers, is notoriously difficult with conventional
computers.“The world record right now is a number 129 digits
long, and factoring a 1,000 digit number is estimated to take longer
than the age of the universe,” said Geller. “But a quantum
computer could do this in a reasonable amount of time.”
Despite the tremendous effort by scientists and engineers, and support
by governments worldwide, no one has been able to build a functioning
quantum computer. “The problem is that it is hard to control
a quantum system, such as an atom, enough to make it compute for you,
but without disturbing the delicate pattern of its motion,” continued
Geller. “One is always fighting against Heisenberg’s uncertainty
principle.”
In Cleland and Geller’s design, there are no delicate atoms,
but instead superconducting devices called Josephson junctions, which
behave like atoms but which are much larger. Their design, in fact,
looks much like an ordinary microprocessor chip.
“There is great potential here,” added Geller, “to
make a truly large-scale quantum computer, using the very fabrication
technology developed by the semiconductor industry.” A key ingredient
in their design is the use of nanometer-scale solid-state resonators,
much like the quartz crystals in a watch, to couple the Josephson
junctions together and to allow quantum information to be stored in
memory.
According to the article, a nanomechanical resonator has resonances
in the right frequency range, about 1 GHz, to couple Josephson junctions
effectively, and also has a high “quality factor” in that
information is channeled efficiently and is not lost or scrambled.
Cleland has tested resonators made from disks of aluminum nitride
slightly more than one micrometer wide and several hundred nanometers
thick. At low temperatures, approaching 4.2 Kelvin, these devices
display a sharp resonance and maintain an extremely high quality factor.
To perform a quantum logic operation, the quantum state of a Josephson
junction is transferred to the resonator, from where it would then
be processed by another junction. Calculations by Cleland and Geller
suggest that their nanomechanical resonator can perform basic quantum
computing operations in a few tens of nanoseconds. Two junctions can
also be prepared in an entangled state by a resonator, by allowing
a quantum bit to be “teleported” between the Josephson
junctions, a form of quantum communication. “Using this design,
we believe that we will be able to build the core of a small quantum
computer, using mostly existing technology,” explained Geller.
Geller, a professor in the department of physics and astronomy and
a member of the UGA Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center, also
leads a national team of pre-eminent physicists and engineers that
received a $1.46 million NSF grant this past May to study the mechanical
properties of nanoscale solid-state, biological and integrated nano-bio
systems. UGA is the lead institution on the grant.
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