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Ken Kubos
 
Default Researchers closer to mastering the 'spookiness' of quantum mechanics

http://www.physorg.com/news85412007.html

Researchers closer to mastering the 'spookiness' of quantum mechanics

One of the most famous code-breakers is the Colossus - used by the British
during World War Two to break German signals intelligence. Credit:
TopFoto/HIP.
Oxford theorists and their Cambridge collaborator have moved a step closer
to creating a machine that would fully harness the deepest laws of physics,
quantum mechanics. The machine, called a quantum computer, would have a
range of potential uses - including code breaking. It could exactly simulate
the behaviour of matter at the atomic scale, providing new insights to
chemists and biologists.

Quantum dots - tiny nuggets of one material embedded inside another - could
be the ideal building blocks for a quantum computer. However, in order to
build such a device, it is necessary to create 'entanglement' between
different dots, a phenomenon labelled 'spooky' by Einstein and the essential
resource that would give a quantum computer its power.

In Physical Review Letters, Oxford student Avinash Kolli and his coauthors
suggest a new way to create entanglement, by identifying two different
stable states of a quantum dot (call them 'A' and 'B') and then targeting
two such dots simultaneously with a laser.

The team discovered that, by watching the light emitted back from the dots,
they would learn exactly one piece of information - namely, whether the two
dots are in the same state as one another (AA or BB) or different states (AB
or BA).

Crucially, this is the only piece of information that would come back. If
the two dots are in different states, and if there really is no further
information, then nature itself has absolutely no evidence indicating which
is A and which is B. This would mean that the actual state of the two dots
would be both AB and BA at the same time.

This strange state is a so-called quantum superposition. It is also an
entanglement between the dots - the maximum possible degree of entanglement
in fact.

Avinash Kolli said: 'So, simply by illuminating the two dots with a laser
and watching the light they emit, entanglement can be created - the elusive
resource that will make quantum computation possible.'

A lot of work still needs to be done to flesh out this idea into a full
blueprint for a quantum dot computer, but the predictions are testable with
existing laboratory equipment. The team is now looking for experimentalists
to collaborate on testing this proposal.

Source: University of Oxford


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Your Buddy,
Ken

"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
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