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Introduction to Quantum Computing Lecture 3: Qubit Technologies

Introduction to Quantum Computing Lecture 3: Qubit Technologies. Rod Van Meter rdv@tera.ics.keio.ac.jp June 27-29, 2005 WIDE University School of Internet with help from K. Itoh, E. Abe, and slides from T. Fujisawa (NTT) . Course Outline. Lecture 1: Introduction

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Introduction to Quantum Computing Lecture 3: Qubit Technologies

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  1. Introduction to Quantum ComputingLecture 3: Qubit Technologies Rod Van Meter rdv@tera.ics.keio.ac.jp June 27-29, 2005 WIDE University School of Internet with help from K. Itoh, E. Abe, and slides from T. Fujisawa (NTT)

  2. Course Outline • Lecture 1: Introduction • Lecture 2: Quantum Algorithms • Lecture 3: Devices and Technologies • Lecture 4: Quantum Computer Architecture • Lecture 5: Quantum Networking & Wrapup

  3. Lecture Outline • Brief review • DiVincenzo's criteria & tech overview • Technologies:All-Si NMR, quantum dots, superconducting, ion trap, etc. • Comparison

  4. Superposition and ket Notation • Qubit state is a vector • two complex numbers • |0> means the vector for 0;|1> means the vector for 1;|00> means two bits, both 0;|010> is three bits, middle one is 1;etc. • A qubit may be partially both!(just like the cat, but stay tuned for measurement...)complex numbers are wave fn amplitude; square is probability of 0 or 1

  5. 1-qubit basis states superposition Bloch sphere global phase has no effect relativephase 1-qubit state and Bloch sphere(Phase)

  6. or Reversible Gates NOT Control-NOT Control-Control-NOT(Toffoli gate) Control-SWAP(Fredkin gate) This set can be used for classical reversible computing, as well;brings thermodynamic benefits. Bennett, IBM JR&DNov. 1973

  7. Quantum Algorithms • Deutsch-Jozsa(D-J) • Proc. R. Soc. London A, 439, 553 (1992) • Grover's search algorithm • Phys. Rev. Lett., 79, 325 (1997) • Shor's algorithm for factoring large numbers • SIAM J. Comp., 26, 1484 (1997) D. Deutsch R. Jozsa L. K. Grover P. W. Shor

  8. unordered items, we're looking for item “β” Grover's Search Classically, would have to check about N/2 items β Hard task!! items To use Grover's algorithm, create superposition of all N inputs repetitions of the Grover iterator G will produce “β” N

  9. An “efficient” classical algorithm for this problem is not known. Shor's Factoring Algorithm Using classical number field sieve, factoring anL-bit number is Using quantum Fouriertransform (QFT), factoring an L-bit number is Superpolynomial speedup! (Careful, technicallynot exponential speedup, and not yet proven thatno better classical algorithm exists.)

  10. So, can we surpass a classical computer with a quantum one? Depends on discovery of quantum algorithms and development of technologies Summary: Characteristics of QC • Superposition brings massive parallelism • Phase and amplitude of wave function used • Entanglement • Unitary transforms are gates • Measurement both necessary and problematic when unwanted

  11. Lecture Outline • Brief review • DiVincenzo's criteria & tech overview • Technologies:All-Si NMR, quantum dots, superconducting, ion trap, etc. • Comparison

  12. Qubit initialization Execution of an algorithm Read the result Must be done within decoherence time! DiVincenzo’s Criteria • Well defined extensible qubit array • Preparable in the “000…” state • Long decoherence time • Universal set of gate operations • Single quantum measurements

  13. Qubit Representations • Electron: number, spin, energy level • Nucleus: spin • Photon: number, polarization, time, angular momentum, momentum (energy) • Flux (current) • Anything that can be quantized and follows Schrodinger's equation

  14. Problems • Coherence time • nanoseconds for quantum dot, superconducting systems • Gate time • NMR-based systems slow(100s of Hz to low kHz) • Gate quality • generally, 60-70% accurate • Interconnecting qubits • Scaling number of qubits • largest to date 7 qubits, most 1 or 2

  15. A Few Physical Experiments • IBM, Stanford, Berkeley, MIT(solution NMR) • NEC (Josephson junction charge) • Delft (JJ flux) • NTT (JJ, quantum dot) • Tokyo U. (quantum dot, optical lattice, ...) • Keio U. (silicon NMR, quantum dot) • Caltech, Berkeley, Stanford (quantum dot) • Australia (ion trap, linear optics) • Many others (cavity QED, Kane NMR, ...)

  16. Physical Realization Cavity QED Ion trap Magnetic resonance Superconductor

  17. Neutral atoms in optical lattices Atomic cavity QED Flux states in superconductors Optically driven electronic states in quantum dots Entanglement (4) Rabi (1) Trapped ions Charge states in superconductors Optically driven spin states in quantum dots Solution NMR Shor (7) Electronically driven electronic states in quantum dots Electrons floating on liquid helium All-silicon quantum computer Crystal lattice Single-spin MRFM Impurity spins in semiconductors Electronically driven spin states in quantum dots Others: Nonlinear optics, STM etc Examples of Qubits Solid-state systems

  18. Lecture Outline • Brief review • DiVincenzo's criteria & tech overview • Technologies:All-Si NMR, quantum dots, superconducting, ion trap, etc. • Comparison

  19. Technologies Reviewed • Liquid NMR • Solid-state NMR • Quantum dots • Superconducting Josephson junctions • Ion trap • Optical lattice • All-optical

  20. Liquid Solution NMR Billions of molecules are used, each one a separate quantum computer. Most advanced experimental demonstrations to date, but poor scalability as molecule design gets difficult and SNR falls. Qubits are stored in nuclear spin of flourine atoms and controlled by different frequencies of magnetic pulses. Used to factor 15 experimentally. Vandersypen, 2000

  21. 10529Si atomic chains in 28Si matrix work like molecules in solution NMR QC. 2 1 4 3 6 Copies 5 8 7 A large field gradient separates Larmor frequencies of the nuclei within each chain. 9 All-Silicon Quantum Computer Many techniques used for solution NMR QC are available. No impurity dopants or electrical contacts are needed. T.D.Ladd et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 017901 (2002)

  22. dBz/dz = 1.4 T/mm B0 = 7 T Active region 100m x 0.2m Overview

  23. Keio Choice of System and Material Two incompatible conditions to realize quantum computers: Isolation of qubits from the environment Control of qubits through interactions with the environment System: NMR • Weak ensemble measurement • Established rf pulse techniques for manipulation Material: silicon • Longest possible decoherence time • Established crystal growth, processing and isotope engineering technologies

  24. Fabrication: 29Si Atomic Chain Regular step arrays on slightly miscut 28Si(111)7x7 surface (~1º from normal) Steps are straight, with about 1 kink in 2000 sites. 29Si 28Si STM image J.-L.Lin et al., J. Appl. Phys 84, 255 (1998)

  25. Kane Solid-State NMR Qubits are stored in the spin of the nucleus of phosphorus atoms embedded in a zero-spin silicon substrate. Standard VLSI gates on top control electric field, allowing electrons to read nuclear state and transfer that state to another P atom. Kane, Nature, 393(133), 1998

  26. Semiconductor nanostructure High electron mobility transistor (HEMT) Quantum dot structure # of electrons N < 30 http://www.fqd.fujitsu.com/

  27. Quantum dot in the Coulomb blockade regime Single-electron transistor (SET) Coulomb blockade region, (the number of electrons is an integer, N) orbital degree of freedom & spin degree of freedom double quantum dot bonding & anti-bonding orbitals (charge qubit) (spin qubit)

  28. 500 nm |(r)|2 1s 2p 3d Quantum dot artificial atom S. Tarucha et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 77, 3613 (1996).

  29. dissipation (T1), decoherence (T2) & manipulation Environment surrounding a QD coherency of the system

  30. Double quantum dot device A double quantum dot fabricated in AlGaAs/GaAs 2DEG (schematically shown by circles) cf. CPB charge qubit (Y. Nakamura ’99) Approximate number of electrons: 10 ~ 30 Charging energy of each dot: ~ 1 meV Typical energy spacing in each dot: ~100 ueV Electrostatic coupling energy: ~200 ueV Lattice temp. ~ 20 mK (2 ueV) Electron temp. ~100 mK (9 ueV)

  31. dilution refrigerator Tlat ~ 20 mK Telec ~ 100 mK B = 0.5 T Double quantum dot AlGaAs/GaAs 2DEG EB litho., fine gates, ECR etching Measurement system “thin coax” filtering 1 mm

  32. Josephson Junction Charge (NEC) One-qubit device can control the number of Cooper pairs of electrons in the box, create superposition of states.Superconducting device, operates at low temperatures (30 mK). Two-qubit device Pashkin et al., Nature, 421(823), 2003 Nakamura et al., Nature, 398(786), 1999

  33. JJ Phase (NIST, USA) Qubit representation is phase of current oscillation.Device is physically large enough to see! J. Martinis, NIST

  34. JJ Flux (Delft) The qubit representation is a quantum of current (flux) moving either clockwise or counter-clockwise around the loop.

  35. Ion Trap Ions (charged atoms) are suspended in space in an oscillating electric field. Each atom is controlled by a laser. NIST, Oxford, Australia, MIT, others

  36. Ion Trap Number of atoms that can be controlled is limited, and each requires its own laser. Probably <100 ions max. NIST, Oxford, Australia, MIT, others

  37. Optical Lattice (Atoms) Neutral atoms are held in place by standing waves from several lasers.Atoms can be brought together to execute gates by changing the waves slightly.Also used to make high-precision atomic clocks. Deutsch, UNM

  38. All-Optical (Photons) All-optical CNOT gate composed from beam splitters and wave plates. O'Brien et al., Nature 426(264), 2003

  39. Lecture Outline • Brief review • DiVincenzo's criteria & tech overview • Technologies:All-Si NMR, quantum dots, superconducting, ion trap, etc. • Comparison

  40. Comparison • NMR (Keio, Kane): excellent coherence times, slow gates • nuclear spin well isolated from environment • Kane complicated by matching VLSI pitch to necessary P atom spacing, and alignment • Superconducting: fast gates, but fast decoherence • Quantum dots: ditto • electrons in solid state easily influenced by environment

  41. Comparison (2) • Ion trap: medium-fast gates, good coherence time (one of the best candidates if scalability can be addressed) • Optical lattice (atoms): medium-fast gates, good coherence time; gates and addressability of individual atoms need work • All-Optical (photons): well-understood technology for individual photons, but hard to get photons to interact, hard to store

  42. By the Numbers Apples-to-apples comparison is difficult, and coherence times are rising experimentally.

  43. Quantum Error Correction and the Threshold Theorem Our entire discussion so far has been on “perfect” quantum gates, but of course they are not perfect. Various “threshold theorems” have suggested that we need 10^4 to 10^6 gates in less than the decoherence time in order to apply quantum error correction (QEC). QEC is a big enough topic to warrant several lectures on its own.

  44. Wrap-Up • Qubits can be physically stored on electrons (spin, count), nuclear spin, photons (polarization, position, time), or phenomena such as current (flux); anything that is quantized and subject to Schrodinger's wave equation. • More than fifty technologies have been proposed; all of these described are relatively advanced experimentally.

  45. Wrap-Up (2) • Many technologies depend on VLSI • Most are one or two qubits • Have not yet started our own Moore's Law doubling schedule • Several years yet to true, controllable, multi-qubit demonstrations • 10-20 years to a useful system?

  46. Upcoming Lectures • Quantum computer architecture • how do you scale up? how do you build a computer out of this? what matters? • Quantum networking • Quantum key distribution • Teleportation • Wrap-Up and Review

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