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| Home : Volume 27 : Spring 2001 : | |
| Engineering and physics team to bulid next-generation computer | |
Clockwise, from top left: Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Dan van der Weide, Professor of Physics Bob Joynt, Assistant Professor of Physics Mark Eriksson and Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Max Lagally
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| So powerful would be a working quantum computer that it could solve in seconds certain problems that would take the fastest existing "classical" supercomputer millions of years to complete. |
Seeking the "Holy Grail" of computing power, an interdisciplinary team of UW engineering and physics researchers plans to use silicon germanium quantum dots to build the foundation for a new generation of computers. From a competitive field of more than 30 submissions, the U.S. Army Research Office funded UW researchers with a three-year, $1.2 million grant to combine their unique tools and talents in the development of a semiconductor-based quantum gate or qubit. (See the related "Spooky action" story to learn about quantum computing.)
Professors Mark Eriksson and Bob Joynt (physics), Max Lagally (Erwin W. Mueller Professor and Bascom Professor of Surface Science), and principal investigator Dan van der Weide (electrical and computer engineering) submitted the proposal with postdoctoral researcher Mark Friesen (physics theory), staff scientist Don Savage and graduate student Paul Rugheimer (materials growth). The team will combine advanced physics theory, silicon-germanium heterostructured materials, low-temperature and high frequency measurements to build a solid-state Controlled-NOT logic gate.
Creating this elemental piece of a quantum computer will be an achievement in itself, but it is the team's approach that is most significant. A useful quantum computer will require a chain of thousands of qubits. Other approaches have formed qubits using nuclear magnetic resonance or by trapping individual atoms in a vacuum, but have been limited by the inability to link together large numbers of qubits.
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"Spooky action" gives quantum computing its power
To understand the workings and potential of a quantum computer, one must be willing to step through the looking glass and believe in unbelievable things ideas like entanglement, superposition and correlation operating in an invisible atomic world. A quantum dot is nanometer-scale "box" that holds a distinct number of electrons. The number can be manipulated by changing electrical fields near the dot. A quantum computer would use these dots to take advantage of a quantum phenomenon known as superposition, in which, for example, an electron would have its spin state both up and down at the same time. Where a classical computer uses an on or off state to represent bits of information in the "zeros" and "ones" of binary code, a quantum computer uses the superposition as quantum bits, or qubits. With superposition, a qubit is in neither the zero nor the one state before being measured, but exists as both zero and one simultaneously. The spin state of the particle is determined at the time it is measured. Quantum theory holds that particles that have interacted are connected or entangled in pairs through the process of correlation. Determining the up or down spin state of one particle affects the spin state of its entangled pair. Even more astounding is that the entangled particles retain their connection no matter how great the distance between them. It's something Einstein called "spooky action at a distance." All of this together means a quantum computer could perform massively parallel calculations enabling certain "hard" problems, like encryption, to be resolved in mere seconds. |
The UW team's process uses new science and existing technology similar to CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor) technology. That means if one qubit can be made, the process likely could be scaled to make and link qubits by the thousands. In 10 to 30 years, researchers predict their success could result in the first useful quantum computer. The team has already disclosed its approach to WARF in consideration of a patent.
"That is what is so exciting," says Eriksson. "Here we are building a new type of quantum dot that hasn't been made before, and if we can do this successfully, the infrastructure is out there so that the technical community should be able to run with this."
The team attributes its success in winning the competitive grant to its novel approach, their unique mix of intellectual expertise and specialized facilities found across campus. While related research efforts might focus on theory, materials growth or experimentation alone, the UW team is situated to integrate its new approach with existing results and theory into a working result.
"This has been an unusually strong and collaborative effort from the beginning," says
Lagally,
an MS&E professor. "It's really an outgrowth of
MRSEC (
Materials Research Science and Engineering Center
)
directed by
Tom Kuech.
The fact that we have this excellent collaboration in materials and the physical sciences made us successful in the Nanophase Cluster-Hiring Initiative. Both
van der Weide
and
Eriksson
were among the first cluster hires of the Madison Initiative. The initiative is allowing us to explore the future of computing."
Content by perspective@engr.wisc.edu
Date last modified: Tuesday, 22-May-2001 09:05:50 CDT
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