Vanishing atoms can ruin quantum calculations. Scientists have a new plan to locate leaks.
Quantum Computing’s Hidden Problem: Atom Loss
This research was supported by Sandia’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program.
A Looming Crisis for Future Quantum Machines
Neutral-Atom Computers Now Have a Fighting Chance
The Challenge: Detecting Atoms Without Looking
“Quantum calculations are extremely fragile,” Yuan-Yu said.
So how do you check that an atom is in the processor without observing it?
A Surprising Discovery Sparks a Breakthrough
Chow, a University of New Mexico doctoral student and Sandia intern at the time of the research, said he never expected this breakthrough.
“This was certainly not a paper that we had planned to write,” he said.
He was debugging a small bit of quantum computing code at Sandia for his dissertation. The code diagnoses the entangling interaction — a unique quantum process that links the states of atoms — by repeatedly applying an operation and comparing the results when two atoms interact versus when only one atom is present. When the atoms interact, the repeated application of the operation makes them switch between entangled and disentangled states. In this comparison, he observed a key pattern.
Every other run, when the atoms were disentangled, the outcome for the two-atom case was markedly different from the solo-atom case.
Turning an Accidental Finding into a Quantum Tool
Without trying, Chow realized, he had found a subtle signal to indicate a neighboring atom was present in a quantum computer without observing it directly. The oscillating measurement was the scale to measure whether the cat is still in the box.
“This was the thing that got me really excited — that made me show it to Vikas.”
Vikas Buchemmavari, another doctoral student at UNM and a frequent collaborator, knew more quantum theory than Chow. He works in a research group led by the director of UNM’s Center for Quantum Information and Control, Ivan Deutsch.
“I was simultaneously very impressed by the gate quality and very excited about what the idea meant: We could detect if the atom was there or not without damaging the information in it,” Buchemmavari said.
Testing and Verifying the New Method
He went to work formalizing the idea into a set of code tailored to detect atom loss. It would use a second atom, not involved in any calculation, to indirectly detect whether an atom of interest is missing.
“Quantum systems are very error-prone. To build useful quantum computers, we need quantum error correction techniques that correct the errors and make the calculations reliable. Atom loss — and leakage errors — are some of the worst kinds of errors to deal with,” he said.
The two then developed ways to test their idea.
“You need to test not only your ability to detect an atom, but to detect an atom that starts in many different states,” Chow said. “And then the second part is to check that it doesn’t disturb that state of the first atom.”
Chow’s Sandia team jumped onboard, too, helping test the new routine and verify its results by comparing them to a method of directly observing the atoms.
“We had the capability at Sandia to verify it was working because we have this measurement where we can say the atom is in the one state or the zero state or it’s gone. A lot of people don’t have that third option,” Sandia’s Bethany Little said.
The Future of Correcting Atom Loss
Looking ahead, Buchemmavari said, “We hope this work serves as a guide for other groups implementing these techniques to overcome these errors in their systems. We also hope this spurs deeper research into the advantages and trade-offs of these techniques in real systems.”
Chow, who has since earned his doctoral degree and now works at HRL Laboratories, said he is proud of the discovery because it shows the problem of atom loss is solvable, even if future quantum computers do not use his exact method.
“If you’re careful to keep your eyes open, you might spot something really useful.”
website: popularscientist.com
#QuantumComputing
#Qubits
#Breakthrough
#TechInnovation
#ScientificDiscovery
#FutureOfComputing
No comments:
Post a Comment