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2Physics

2Physics Quote:
"In the actual experiment, we utilized two Bell states to create a cluster state made up of four photons. Depending on the type and order of measurements on this cluster, different one-qubit and two-qubit operations could be realized, therefore demonstrating the working principles of such one-way quantum computers and the potential to perform even more complex computations."
-- Robert Prevedel and Anton Zeilinger (Read their article: "Entanglement and One-Way Quantum Computing" )

Monday, November 20, 2006

Breakthrough in Quantum Computing

Christoph Boehme of University of Utah works with equipment used to detect magnetic "spins" of phosphorus atoms (photo courtsey: John Lupton/University of Utah)

A US-German team of scientists could advance a step closer to designing super fast quantum computers with their recent experiment showing how a phosphorus-and-silicon quantum computer might work. Their study to be published in the December issue of Nature Physics shows it's possible to read data stored in the form of the magnetic "spins" of phosphorus atoms. They have demonstrated experimentally that the nuclear spin orientation of phosphorus atoms embedded in silicon can be measured by very subtle electric currents passing through the phosphorus atoms.

Digital computers of the current world rely on information transmitted by flowing electricity in the form of electrons, which are negatively charged subatomic particles. Transistors in these computers are electrical switches that store data as "bits" in which "off" (no electrical charge) and "on" (charge is present) represent one bit of information: either 0 or 1. On the other hand, in a quantum computer, one quantum bit or 'qubit' could be both 0 and 1 at the same time. Quantum computers rely on the fact that the smallest particles can be in different places at the same time abiding by some seemingly strange laws of quantum mechanics.

The scientists harnessed the unique properties of quantum physics by "doping" silicon — the semiconductor used in digital computer chips — with atoms of phosphorus. Next they applied electric current to read and process the data stored in the "spins" of those phosphorous atoms' nuclei. which may register a value of 0 and 1 simultaneously. In essence, the team's study was about a successful "reading" of the net spin of 10,000 of the electrons and nuclei of phosphorus atoms near the surface of the silicon.

This is a major step in right direction but, like any other revolution in science and technology, it needs to go through lot of developments and wait for progress in other related aspects before a quantum computer becomes a reality.

Team of scientists: Christoph Boehme, University of Utah, USA; Klaus Lips at the Hahn-Meitner Institute, Berlin with graduate students Andre Stegner and Hans Huebl; Martin Stutzmann and Martin Brandt, Technical University of Munich.

Background Reading:
"
The Quantum Computer: An Introduction" by Jacob West, Caltech, USA
"Quantum computation: a tutorial" by Samuel L. Braunstein, University of York, York, UK.
Wikipedia page on quantum computer

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Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Upcoming Physics Conferences

Here is a selected list of forthcoming conferences in Physics. You are welcome to freely advertise Physics jobs or conferences in 2Physics by sending an email to 2Physics@gmail.com.

December 4-7: Quantum mechanics:from fundamental problems to applications (Bertinoro, Italy)
December 6-7: Perfik 2006: National Physics Conference 2006 (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)
December 12-15: TSL Expository Lecture Series V: Computational Physical Sciences 2006 (Selangor, Malaysia)
December 12-17: Miami topical conference on elementary particles, astrophysics, and cosmology(Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA)
December 17-19: Intl workshop on neutrino masses and mixings - toward unified understanding of quark and lepton mass matrices (Shizuoka, Japan)
January 8-13: High-energy Quantum ChromoDynamics (QCD) : from RHIC to LHC (Trento, Trentino, Italy)
January 15-19: Higher structures in geometry and physics: Conference in honor of Murray Gerstenhaber's 80th and Jim Stasheff's 70th birthdays (Paris, France)
February 24- March 3: 45th Schladming winter school on theoretical physics: conceptual and numerical challenges in femto- and peta-scale physics (Schladming, Austria)
March 24-29: The origin of galaxies (Otz Valley, nr. Innsbruck, Austria)
March 26-31: X hadron physics (Florianopolis, Brazil)
April 23-27: Advanced computing and analysis techniques in physics (Amsterdam, The Netherlands)