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Ares
22nd July 2011, 07:33 AM
Scientists have taken the next major step toward quantum computing, which will use quantum mechanics to revolutionize the way information is processed.

Quantum computers will capitalize on the mind-bending properties of quantum particles to perform complex calculations that are impossible for today’s traditional computers.

Using high-magnetic fields, Susumu Takahashi, assistant professor at the University of Southern California (USC) Dornsife College of Letters, Arts, and Sciences, and his colleagues managed to suppress decoherence, one of the key stumbling blocks in quantum computing.

"High-magnetic fields reduce the level of the noises in the surroundings so they can constrain the decoherence very efficiently," Takahashi says. Decoherence has been described as a "quantum bug" that destroys fundamental properties that quantum computers would rely on.

The research appears online in Nature.

Quantum computing uses quantum bits, or qubits, to encode information in the form of ones and zeros. Unlike a traditional computer that uses traditional bits, a quantum computer takes advantage of the seemingly impossible fact that qubits can exist in multiple states at the same time, which is called "superposition."

While a bit can represent either a one or a zero, a qubit can represent a one and a zero at the same time due to superposition. This allows for simultaneous processing of calculations in a truly parallel system, skyrocketing computing ability.

Though the concepts underpinning quantum computing are not new, problems such as decoherence have hindered the construction of a fully functioning quantum computer.

Think of decoherence as a form of noise or interference, knocking a quantum particle out of superposition—robbing it of that special property that makes it so useful. If a quantum computer relies on a quantum particle’s ability to be both here and there, then decoherence is the frustrating phenomenon that causes a quantum particle to be either here or there.

University of British Columbia researchers calculated all sources of decoherence in their experiment as a function of temperature, magnetic field, and by nuclear isotopic concentrations, and suggested the optimum condition to operate qubits, reducing decoherence by approximately 1,000 times.

In Takahashi's experiments, qubits were predicted to last about 500 microseconds at the optimum condition—ages, relatively speaking.

Decoherence in qubit systems falls into two general categories. One is an intrinsic decoherence caused by constituents in the qubit system, and the other is an extrinsic decoherence caused by imperfections of the system—impurities and defects, for example.

In their study, Takahashi and his colleagues investigated single crystals of molecular magnets. Because of their purity, molecular magnets eliminate the extrinsic decoherence, allowing researchers to calculate intrinsic decoherence precisely.

"For the first time, we've been able to predict and control all the environmental decoherence mechanisms in a very complex system—in this case a large magnetic molecule," says Phil Stamp, University of British Columbia professor of physics and astronomy and director of the Pacific Institute of Theoretical Physics.

Using crystalline molecular magnets allowed researchers to build qubits out of an immense quantity of quantum particles rather than a single quantum object—the way most proto-quantum computers are built at the moment.

"This will obviously increase signals from the qubit drastically so the detection of the qubit in the molecular magnets is much easier," says Takahashi, who conducted his research as a project scientist in the Institute of Terahertz Science and Technology and the Department of Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Takahashi has been at USC Dornsife since 2010.

http://www.rdmag.com/News/2011/07/Information-Technology-Computer-Technology-USC-Scientists-Contribute-To-A-Breakthrough-In-Quantum-Computing/?et_cid=1843047&et_rid=259409735

vacuum
22nd July 2011, 08:34 AM
Sounds like encryption will be useless soon.

Gaillo
22nd July 2011, 11:29 AM
Scientists have taken the next major step toward quantum computing, which will use quantum mechanics to revolutionize the way information is processed is already being used in the vast underground NSA headquarters to break secret codes...

Fixed the article for them... ;D

Ares
22nd July 2011, 11:30 AM
Sounds like encryption will be useless soon.

For traditional encryption yes. Then you get into Quantum Encryption. :)

Gaillo
22nd July 2011, 11:33 AM
Sounds like encryption will be useless soon.

Only certain forms of encryption, particularly public-key systems that rely on the difficulty of factoring the product of two large prime numbers.

One-time-pad cyphers, for example, will still be immune.

keehah
22nd July 2011, 12:02 PM
Quantum computers will capitalize on the mind-bending properties of quantum particles

Aether based wave theories of matter, like other enlightened science theory, does not require a bent mind (a sign of the effects of controlling propaganda). ;)

Gaillo
22nd July 2011, 12:27 PM
Aether based wave theories of matter, like other enlightened science theory, does not require a bent mind (a sign of the effects of controlling propaganda). ;)

While I have no doubt that certain scientific phenomenon are suppressed, and some are misdirected in order to prevent further progress in some areas, I need to say this: Not all observed phenomenon "make sense", are intuitive, or obey "common sense" expectations. I've personally worked with devices and effects in my work that could NOT work if quantum effects aren't a valid explanation of the physical universe... in short I don't think quantum mechanics is one of those "misdirected" branches of science, regardless of how "wierd" it seems.

"Enlightened" science theory is theory that matches up to, and WORKS with observed physical phenomenon... not theory that matches our ideas of what is "mind-bending" or not.

Oh... and before people jump in and accuse me of being an "orthodox" follower of mainstream scientific dogma, know this: I think there is something (being suppressed) to Tesla's scalar wave theories, cold fusion, gravitationally based perpetual motion, zero-point energy, and positive return water cracking into Hydrogen and Oxygen (so-called "Jo Cells"). I'm also FIRMLY of the belief that anti-gravity has been developed, and is in use by experimental air/spacecraft.

vacuum
22nd July 2011, 12:36 PM
While I have no doubt that certain scientific phenomenon are suppressed, and some are misdirected in order to prevent further progress in some areas, I need to say this: Not all observed phenomenon "make sense", are intuitive, or obey "common sense" expectations. I've personally worked with devices and effects in my work that could NOT work if quantum effects aren't a valid explanation of the physical universe... in short I don't think quantum mechanics is one of those "misdirected" branches of science, regardless of how "wierd" it seems.

"Enlightened" science theory is theory that matches up to, and WORKS with observed physical phenomenon... not theory that matches our ideas of what is "mind-bending" or not.

I don't think it necessarily means that the weird effects we see aren't completely real and valid, its just that the explanation of them doesn't require a "bent mind". For example, when the earth was assumed to be the center of the universe, there were all these complicated models to explain the movements of other planets and the sun. Just assuming the sun was in the center made all those "weird" movements have a trivial explanation.

keehah
22nd July 2011, 01:21 PM
Thanks Vacuum! That was the point I was trying to make. And a very applicable example too.

As above, so below!

http://www.16pi2.com/joomla/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=92&Itemid=112

Whereas the bulk of Quantum Mechanics and its associated theories attempt to describe quantum behavior, my theory [fluid Aether, subatomic particles in five dimensions (three length, two frequency)] attempts to describe quantum structure.