[Home]
[Full version]
New one-way quantum computer design offers possibility of efficient optical information processing
Oct 01 ,Physics
One of the most exciting and diverse fields of science today involves quantum information processing. There are many designs for quantum computers suggested, and a few that have been demonstrated. Among the demonstrated suggestions for a quantum computer is a one-way quantum computation process that makes use of a two-photon four-qubit cluster state.
Kai Chen, a scientist at the Physikalisches Institut in Heidelberg, Germany and the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) in Hefei, China, tells PhysOrg.com, “One-way quantum computing model was proposed years ago, but our experiment is a brand new demonstration of the computing model.” Chen and his team, lead by Prof. Jian-Wei Pan, which consists of colleagues from the Physikalisches Institut as well as from USTC and the National Chiao Tung University in Hsinchu, Taiwan, present their results in a Physical Review Letters piece titled, “Experimental Realization of One-Way Quantum Computing with Two-Photon Four-Qubit Cluster States.”
“Our new model of quantum computing is different from the quantum circuit model, which has an input and an output.” Chen says. “We use two-photon cluster states, and information is written onto the cluster, processed, and read out from the cluster by one-particle measurements only.” He does point out that work is needed to produce this method of obtaining output: “We have designed a specific order and choices of measurements to get desired output.”
Cluster states in quantum computing are highly entangled states deemed necessary in one-way quantum computing. In the quantum world, entanglement among quantum objects, such as qubits, is described with reference to the others, even though they may be spatially separated. Indeed, Chen and his colleagues performed their experiment showing a two-photon four-qubit cluster state entangling photons in both spatial and polarization modes.
Chen says that this demonstration of quantum computing is more efficient than other photonic schemes. “Developing and using two-photon cluster states allows us to be four magnitudes more efficient than the previous sources. We are increasing the efficiency of quantum computing.”
He also points out that the new design for photonic quantum computing developed by Pan’s team allows for high fidelity. “With the previous source, there is a lot of intrinsic noise due to multi-photon generation,” Chen says. “Using two-photon, our system offers much lower noise with a very high fidelity quantum gate.” This means that more of the information is passed on, and less of it is lost in background noise.
Chen explains that this type of quantum computing is an optical quantum computer, using light. “We have designed a new scheme for producing the four-qubit cluster states, which are based on techniques that we have developed before for generating hyper-entangled states. With our new designs, the scheme is expected to motivate further progress in quantum computing.” He continues: “We think this quantum computing technique with optics has a very bright future.”
What kind of a future? Chen and his colleagues are already working on ideas for the future of quantum information processing. “We are working on extending qubit numbers to perform more complicated tasks,” he says. In their experiment Chen and his peers implemented a Grover’s search algorithm. They hope that being able to increase their cluster states to eight qubits or more will “exponentially increase the ability to do quantum computing.”
Chen continues: “If we combine our technique of optics with quantum memory using atoms, we can extend our abilities of performing quantum computation and quantum communication. One can think that in the future, we can get a true quantum computer, and have a global quantum network.”
Copyright 2007 PhysOrg.com.
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of PhysOrg.com.
Related stories:
Simulations may explain nanoparticles 'pinned' to graphene
It was hard to understand how a graphene sheet — a featureless, flat sheet of carbon atoms — lying on an equally featureless iridium surface, somehow converted itself into a kind of muffin tin that formed “muffins” made from newly arrived iridium atoms. The muffins were equally spaced and of equal size.
Aromaticity may occur in unexpected materials
Shiv Khanna, Ph.D., professor of physics, and colleagues from Virginia Commonwealth University and Penn State, were recently highlighted in the Editor’s Choice section of the journal
Science, as well as the trade publication Chemical & Engineering News, for the group’s work on the synthesis of an unusual inorganic ring molecule made of arsenic and tellurium, As
2Te
2-2, found to have magnetic and aromatic characteristics.
IBM's Blue Gene Pulls Away from the Pack
IBM’s Blue Gene/L supercomputer sprinted to a new world record as it continued its four-year domination of the official TOP500 Supercomputer Sites list. The world’s fastest computer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California is now nearly three times faster than the rest of the pack.
First use of Deutsch's Algorithm in a cluster state quantum computer
Finding a way to build a quantum computer that works more efficiently than a classical computer has been the holy grail of quantum information processing for more than a decade. “There is quite a strong competition at the moment to realize these protocols,” Mark Tame tells
PhysOrg.com.
Physicists wipe away complexity for a clearer view of heavy nuclei
Despite advances in experimental nuclear physics, the most detailed probing of atomic nuclei still requires heavy doses of advanced nuclear theory. The problem is that using theory to make meaningful predictions requires massive datasets that tax even high-powered supercomputers.
Plugging the leaks in a quantum computer
New work by two researchers at HP Laboratories Bristol sets out to solve one of the major difficulties in quantum computer architectures that use directly interacting qubits.
Quantum computing: No turning back
The first realizations of 'cluster states' and cluster-state quantum computation are reported in
Nature this week (10 March issue, pp169-176). This represents a significant move from theory to reality for an alternative approach to quantum computing first proposed in 2001.
Gold Quantum Dots: Fluorescing "Artificial Atoms" Could Have Applications in Biological Labeling, Nanoscale Optoelectron
A new class of water-soluble quantum dots made from small numbers of gold atoms could be the basis for a new biological labeling system with narrower excitation spectra, smaller particle size and fluorescence comparable to systems based on
semiconductor quantum dots.
Providing the "missing link" between atomic and
nanoparticle behavior in noble metals, these multi-electron "artificial atoms" could also serve as light-emitting sources in nanoscale optoelectronics and in energy transfer pairs.
[Home]
[Full version]