Two
trapped ions (in blue) are selected by optical tweezers (in red). A quantum
gate between the ions can be implemented using electric fields. Credit:
University of Amsterdam
Researchers
from the University of Amsterdam have suggested a new architecture for a
scalable quantum computer. Making use of the collective motion of the
constituent particles, they were able to build new building blocks for quantum
computing that pose less technical difficulties than current state-of-the art
methods. The conclusions were recently published in Physical Review Letters.
The physicists
work at QuSoft and the Institute of Physics in the groups of Rene Gerritsma and
Arghavan Safavi-Naini. The study, which was led by the Ph.D. candidate Matteo
Mazzanti, combines two important ingredients. One is a so-called trapped-ion
platform, one of the most promising candidates for quantum computing that makes
use of ions—atoms that have either a excess or a shortage of electrons and as a
result are electrically charged. The other is the use of a clever method to
control the ions provided by optical tweezers and oscillating electric fields.
As the
name proposes, trapped-ion quantum computers use a crystal of trapped ions.
These ions can move individually, but more essentially, also as a whole. As it
turns out, the possible collective motions of the ions facilitate the
interactions between individual pairs of ions. In the proposal, this idea is
made concrete by applying a uniform electric field to the whole crystal, in
order to mediate interactions between two specific ions in that crystal. The
two ions are selected by applying tweezer potentials on them—see the image
above. The homogeneity of the electric field assures that it will only allow
the two ions to move together with all other ions in the crystal. As a result,
the interaction strength between the two selected ions is fixed, regardless of
how far apart the two ions are.
A quantum
computer consists of 'gates,' small computational building blocks that perform
quantum analogs of operations like 'and' and 'or' that we know from ordinary
computers. In trapped-ion quantum computers, these gates act on the ions, and
their operation depends on the interactions between these particles. In the
above setup, the fact that those interactions do not depend on the distance
means that also the duration of operation of a gate is independent of that
distance. As a result, this scheme for quantum computing is inherently
scalable, and compared to other state-of-the-art quantum computing schemes
poses fewer technical challenges for achieving comparably well-operating
quantum computers.
Reference:
0 Comments