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Published On: Oct 31, 2003 07:47 PM
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Qubit
No, not Q*Bert - and no, not the measurement of
Indy's staff....
Much as a journey of a thousand miles begins
with a single step, the journey to a quantum computer begins with a single qubit
- a single bit of quantum memory. A first baby step in that journey was taken
during an experiment in a University of Nebraska-Lincoln laboratory earlier this
year when a team led by UNL physicist Herman Batelaan captured polarized light
in a cell containing a vapor of atoms of the metal
rubidium.In the experiment,
designed by Gao Hong, a post-doctoral student in Batelaan's lab, 20-microsecond
pulses of polarized light were beamed into a tubular, 4-centimeter-long cell
containing rubidium vapor, where the pulses were captured before being released
intact. Light normally moves through space at about 186,000 miles per second and
a microsecond is one-millionth of a second, so a 20-microsecond light pulse
normally would be about 3.72 miles long. But in Gao's experiment, that
3.72-mile-long light pulse was captured and stored in a tube about 1 1/2-inches
in
length.
That was a notable and
interesting achievement, Batelaan said, but it only confirmed results published
in 2001 by teams of scientists at Harvard University and the Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics, both in Cambridge, Mass. "We're happy that we at least
are up to par with the people at Harvard, but Gao did something more," Batelaan
said. "He changed the parameters and found out he could do something with it
that actually might mean
something."Gao demonstrated
that polarized light could be harnessed to create quantum
memory.The ability to store
quantum information is a critical element in the quest to create quantum
computers, devices that would vastly outstrip in power and speed any computer
now in existence. In present-day computers, memory is stored as millions of
zeros and ones on silicon chips. But the point of a quantum computer is to take
advantage of how the laws of physics change at the atomic, or quantum, level,
where it's possible to exist in more than one state
simultaneously.Something other
than static ones and zeros on silicon chips, then, will be necessary for memory
storage."If you have light
going a certain way, you have an electric field that oscillates," Batelaan said.
"It can oscillate horizontally or it can oscillate vertically. Those are the
zeroes and ones of your qubit in this
case."But the problem is,
suppose I want to make a quantum computer out of light. I need to do something
with the light, but the light goes by so quickly that I can't do anything with
it. So it would be nice to take that light and dump it into something so that we
can actually do something with
it."Batelaan, Gao and their
research team (which included research assistant professor Mark Rosenberry and
undergraduate student Ben Williams of Yankton, S.D.) "dumped" the light into the
rubidium tube, and they found they were indeed able to do something with it.
They created a quantum
memory."The scientists at
Harvard looked at one polarization only, and what Gao is capable of doing is not
only two polarizations, but all combinations," Batelaan said. "The fidelity for
all polarizations is better than 95 percent, so it's darn good. It shows that
the polarization state is well-maintained during storage in the rubidium cell.
He clinched this issue that you can use polarized light as a qubit, as a
one-qubit quantum memory."A
standard, run-of-the-mill desktop computer typically has more than 100 million
bits of memory, however, and Batelaan readily acknowledges that there is a long
way to go in the quest for a functional quantum
computer."How many bits do you
have in a typical computer memory? A boatload. How many do we have on our table?
One," he said. "But the difference between zero and one is often enormous and
the obvious thing that we're discussing is how do we make
more."It's anybody's guess what
the future components of quantum computers are going to be. But if you ask my
guess, light is definitely going to play a role, and some medium that can store
the information, some material like rubidium that can talk to the light, is
going to play a role. The process of how light talks to matter, that's what
we're studying."Gao, Rosenberry
and Batelaan published their research in the May issue of Physical
Review A, the journal of atomic, molecular and optical physics.
Their research was supported by a Nebraska Research Initiative
grant.
Posted: Fri - October 31, 2003 at 07:40 PM
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