The assembly
looks like a miniaturized cabletelevision
transmission line with
some added features, including superconducting
circuits with zero
electrical resistance
and multitasking
data bits
that obe y the
unusual rules of
quantum physics.
The cable
might someday
be used in computers
that rely
on quantum behavior
to break
codes, search
databases, and
carry out other
functions exponentially
faster
than today’s most
powerful computers.
Moreover, superconducting
components could be easier to
manufacture and scale up than
alternatives such as wires made
of individual atoms.
Unlike traditional electronic
devices which store information
in the form of digital bits that
each possess a value of either 0 or
1, each superconducting circuit
acts as a quantum bit, or qubit,
which can hold values of 0 and
1 at the same time. Qubits could
perform far more simultaneous
calculations than traditional digital
bits. The section of cable shuttling
information between two superconducting
circuits, or “quantum
bus,” could transport data
between two or more qubits.
A superconducting qubit is
about the width of a human
hair. The researchers fabricate
two qubits on a sapphire microchip,
which sits in a shielded
box measuring about 8 cu mm.
The 7-mm-long cable, similar
to coaxial wiring used in cable
television but much thinner
and flatter, zigzags around the
1.1-mm space between the two
qubits. Like a guitar string, the
cable hums, or resonates, at a
particular tone or frequency in the microwave range. Quantum
information is then stored as energy
in the form of microwave
particles or photons.
The scientists encoded information
in one qubit, transferred
it as microwave energy to
the cable for a storage time of
10 nsec, and then shuttled the
information to a second qubit.
“It’s significant because it means
we can couple more qubits together
and transfer information
between them using one simple
element,” says NIST physicist
Ray Simmonds.
In addition to storing and
transferring information, the cable
can “refresh” superconducting
qubits, which normally maintain
the same delicate quantum
state for only half a microsecond.
Disturbances such as electric or
magnetic noise in the circuit can
rapidly destroy a qubit’s superposition
state.
With improvements, the technology
might be used to repeatedly
refresh data and extend
qubit lifetime more than 100-fold,
enough to create a viable shortterm
quantum computer memory,
says Simmonds. NIST’s cable
might also transfer quantum information between matter and
light microwave energy is a
low-frequency form of light and
thus link quantum computers to
ultrasecure quantum communication
systems.
If they can be built, quantum computers harnessing the unusual
rules of quantum mechanics
might optimize complex systems
such as airline schedules,
make counterfeitproof money,
and solve complex mathematical
problems.