A team of physicists has taken a step toward making the essential building block of quantum computers out of pure light. Their advance has to do with logic gates that perform operations on input data to create new outputs.
Logic gates perform operations on input data to create new outputs. In classical computers, logic gates take the form of diodes or transistors. But quantum computer components are made from individual atoms and subatomic particles. Information processing happens when the particles interact with one another according to the strange laws of quantum physics.
Light particles -- known as "photons" -- have many advantages in quantum computing, but it is notoriously difficult to get them to interact with one another in useful ways. This experiment demonstrates how to create such interactions.
"We've seen the effect of a single particle of light on another optical beam," said Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR) Senior Fellow Aephraim Steinberg, one of the paper's authors and a researcher at U of T's Centre for Quantum Information & Quantum Computing. "Normally light beams pass through each other with no effect at all. To build technologies like optical quantum computers, you want your beams to talk to one another. That's never been done before using a single photon."
The interaction was a two-step process. The researchers shot a single photon at rubidium atoms that they had cooled to a millionth of a degree above absolute zero. The photons became "entangled" with the atoms, which affected the way the rubidium interacted with a separate optical beam. The photon changes the atoms' refractive index, which caused a tiny but measurable "phase shift" in the beam.
This process could be used as an all-optical quantum logic gate, allowing for inputs, information-processing and outputs.
"Quantum logic gates are the most obvious application of this advance," said Steinberg. "But being able to see these interactions is the starting page of an entirely new field of optics. Most of what light does is so well understood that you wouldn't think of it as a field of modern research. But two big exceptions are, 'What happens when you deal with light one particle at a time?' and 'What happens when there are media like our cold atoms that allow different light beams to interact with each other?'"
Both questions have been studied, he says, but never together until now.
GMT 13:41 2018 Wednesday ,05 December
iPad Pro test: Is this tablet superhero ready to replace your laptop?GMT 09:51 2018 Saturday ,20 January
Chinese national sentenced to prison for stealing software codeGMT 12:37 2018 Saturday ,06 January
HP recalls computer batteries over fire riskGMT 03:43 2017 Friday ,17 November
Kaspersky blames NSA hack on infected Microsoft softwareGMT 02:24 2017 Wednesday ,18 October
Supreme Court to hear US-Microsoft digital privacy caseGMT 19:55 2017 Sunday ,03 September
Windows 10 update set for October releaseGMT 08:16 2017 Thursday ,11 May
Switching Windows from white to blackGMT 09:53 2017 Thursday ,12 January
Personal computer sales fall for fifth year in a row according to figures releasedMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor