Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




CHIP TECH
SFU helps quantum computers move closer
by Staff Writers
Burnaby, Canada (SPX) Jun 11, 2012


SFU physicist Mike Thewalt and grad student Kamyar Saeedi with a sample of highly isotopically enriched silicon - its unique properties could advance quantum computing.

The quantum computer is a futuristic machine that could operate at speeds even more mind-boggling than the world's fastest super-computers.

Research involving physicist Mike Thewalt of Simon Fraser University offers a new step towards making quantum computing a reality, through the unique properties of highly enriched and highly purified silicon.

Quantum computers right now exist pretty much in physicists' concepts, and theoretical research. There are some basic quantum computers in existence, but nobody yet can build a truly practical one-or really knows how.

Such computers will harness the powers of atoms and sub-atomic particles (ions, photons, electrons) to perform memory and processing tasks, thanks to strange sub-atomic properties.

What Thewalt and colleagues at Oxford University and in Germany have found is that their special silicon allows processes to take place and be observed in a solid state that scientists used to think required a near-perfect vacuum.

And, using this "28Silicon" they have extended to three minutes-from a matter of seconds-the time in which scientists can manipulate, observe and measure the processes.

"It's by far a record in solid-state systems," Thewalt says. "If you'd asked people a few years ago if this was possible, they'd have said no. It opens new ways of using solid-state semi-conductors such as silicon as a base for quantum computing.

"You can start to do things that people thought you could only do in a vacuum. What we have found, and what wasn't anticipated, are the sharp spectral lines (optical qualities) in the 28Silicon we have been testing. It's so pure, and so perfect. There's no other material like it."

But the world is still a long way from practical quantum computers, he notes.

Quantum computing is a concept that challenges everything we know or understand about today's computers.

Your desktop or laptop computer processes "bits" of information. The bit is a fundamental unit of information, seen by your computer has having a value of either "1" or "0".

That last paragraph, when written in Word, contains 181 characters including spaces. In your home computer, that simple paragraph is processed as a string of some 1,448 "1"s and "0"s.

But in the quantum computer, the "quantum bit" (also known as a "qubit") can be both a "1" and a "0"-and all values between 0 and 1-at the same time.

Says Thewalt: "A classical 1/0 bit can be thought of as a person being either at the North or South Pole, whereas a qubit can be anywhere on the surface of the globe-its actual state is described by two parameters similar to latitude and longitude."

Make a practical quantum computer with enough qubits available and it could complete in minutes calculations that would take today's super-computers years, and your laptop perhaps millions of years.

The work by Thewalt and his fellow researchers opens up yet another avenue of research and application that may, in time, lead to practical breakthroughs in quantum computing.

Their paper will be published Friday in Science ( http://www.sciencemag.org ).

.


Related Links
Simon Fraser University
Computer Chip Architecture, Technology and Manufacture
Nano Technology News From SpaceMart.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CHIP TECH
Integrated sensors handle extreme conditions
Cleveland OH (SPX) Jun 08, 2012
A team of Case Western Reserve University engineers has designed and fabricated integrated amplifier circuits that operate under extreme temperatures - up to 600 degrees Celsius - a feat that was previously impossible. The silicon carbide amplifiers have applications in both aerospace and energy industries. The devices can take the heat of collecting data inside of nuclear reactors and rocket en ... read more


CHIP TECH
Nepal 'Himalayan Viagra' harvest droops to record low

Latest genomic studies shed new light on maize diversity and evolution

OU scientists and international team deciper the genetic code of the tomato

Blowing in the wind: How hidden flower features are crucial for bees

CHIP TECH
SFU helps quantum computers move closer

Rice, UCLA slash energy needs for next-generation memory

Unique approach to materials allows temperature-stable circuits

Integrated sensors handle extreme conditions

CHIP TECH
China says to build 70 new airports by 2015

Airline industry profits to plummet in 2012: IATA

Carbon tax and Europe to dominate airline talks

Israel: Second F-35 deal is in the cards

CHIP TECH
Sao Paulo struggles to upgrade creaking transport system

China auto sales rise 16% in May

Chinese and Japanese investors bid for Saab

Volkswagen targets China in group shakeup

CHIP TECH
China faces 'severe' trade situation: minister

China exports, imports rise sharply

Latin America starts new regional alliance

Outside View: Trade deficit drag

CHIP TECH
Bamboo points way to green construction in Indonesia's Bali

Trees grow in Poland through free send-a-seedling drive

Highway through Amazon worsens effects of climate change, provides mixed economic gains

Standing trees better than burning ones for carbon neutrality

CHIP TECH
Apple unveils maps program, challenging Google

Taking action for GMES

CryoSat goes to sea

S Korea to develop geostationary satellite for environmental monitoring

CHIP TECH
Researchers love triangles

Coatings with nanoparticles that interact with sunlight and eliminate contaminants are developed

Wyss Institute develops nanodevice manufacturing strategy using DNA 'building blocks'

First direct observation of oriented attachment in nanocrystal growth




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement