Qbits unstable: May Limit Quantum Computing 73
museumpeace writes "Netherlands Organiztion for Scientific Research provies a human-readable description of research into the stability of Qbits conducted at Leiden University. The bad news: " Much to their surprise they discovered that the coherence tends to spontaneously disappear, even without external influences." The whole story in physicist-readable form is in the June 17 Physical Review Letters by van Wezel, van den Brink, Zaanen [click abstract or huge PDF]. I am not buying any quantum computing startups 'til they nail this matter down...you can't build a computer if state information is going to evaportate in a second or less."
So what? ECC & refresh! (Score:3, Insightful)
The real question is how deep do you need to make the ECC. That depends on error rate, my guess is Hamming 64+8 ECC will do.
Re:So what? ECC & refresh! (Score:2)
Re:So what? ECC & refresh! (Score:5, Informative)
The trouble with just using ECC to refresh constantly is that you have to approximate some of the quantum gates needed to perform the refresh. It's possible to approximate them to an arbitrary accuracy, but you'll still have some error at each refresh and this error will accumulate like error in a classical analog system.
Decoherence free subspaces don't have this problem since there is no refresh phase for this technique. Basically you take advantage of the fixed points of the noise process and use a subspace spanned by these fixed points. The problem is, this technique only works in situations like sending a bunch of photons through a fiber optic cable that introduces the same error to all the photons.
Right now, I'm suspecting that we will never see any long term quantum storage. However, if you can perform operations on your qubits fast enough you may be able to get a lot done in a few seconds.
Research in QECC may still be able to provide us with some new tricks as well.
Re:So what? ECC & refresh! (Score:3, Informative)
It is a hard problem - even if we have years of theoretical research, the first succesful experiment that probed the real error correction was done only few months ago (see Nature - Dec 1 2004), or http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2004-12/ni o s-ndd [eurekalert.org]
You completely fail to understand. (Score:1, Informative)
The rules of boolean logic that generate Hamming codes do not apply to qubits.
There are quantum ECC techniques, but they're different and have their own issues.
But this "hey guys, it's easy!" snap judgement shows profound ignorance.
DRAM! (Score:2)
However this will probably add to a similar latency as DRAM does vs SRAM. The only answer I can think of is using plain qbits (not refreshed qbits) in the cache of the CPU to speed it up, and hope most of the hits are while the data is good.
Even better is the synchronous (async? I forgot) computer which doesnt use a clock at all.
I think Intel and AMD
Nonsense. (Score:5, Funny)
++ATH
NO CARRIER
Re:Nonsense. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:3, Funny)
Quantos heisenberg 2 6
root@heisenberg # uptime
uncertainty violation at 0x43c4df30
kernel panic dumping core
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2)
Re:Nonsense. (Score:2, Funny)
You solved it! That is the missing Perl reg-ex code for my masterpeice OS-in-a-wrist-watch! I'm complete now! Thank You Thank You!
Or is it the observation technique? (Score:1)
Much to their surprise they discovered that the coherence tends to spontaneously disapp
Re:Or is it the observation technique? (Score:1)
Re:Or is it the observation technique? (Score:2)
Perhaps more importantly, the Copenhagen model (observation causes collapse of waveform) is just a model, and many believe it to be wrong. I find it clumsy and inelegant, although IANAP, but we all know elegance when we see it. The many worlds interpretation [wikipedia.org] seems much neater.
TFA says it's related to the size of the qubit (Score:3, Funny)
Doesn't sound like such a big deal to me (Score:2)
IANAQP, but is it not analogous that we can copy quantum state into multiple replicated locations, make the calculations happen multiple times, and compare results to ensure accuracy? This doesn't sound like a showstopper. It just makes it a little harder to design these things.
Re:Doesn't sound like such a big deal to me (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Doesn't sound like such a big deal to me (Score:3, Informative)
I probably wasn't clear. My point is that the most trivial technology is suitable for storing bits. Whether it's pieces of rock, magnetic fields through coils or charges on a tiny capacitor, bits are fairly easy
Re:Doesn't sound like such a big deal to me (Score:2)
No big deal (Score:2, Funny)
3 - 2 = 1.99999999999
sounds like something MS windows can deal with?
Re:No big deal (Score:2)
> 3 - 2 = 1.99999999999
Here's a clue, the first one's free: the pentium FDIV bug had nothing to do with subtraction. And a lot of decimal fractions can't be represented perfectly in binary, giving you
Re:No big deal (Score:2)
Not necessarily (Score:3, Funny)
If your quantum computer can calculate what you need to know within that period of time and still have time left over to read out the state, then I don't care how fast it evaporates.
I'll still get the cryptokey.
Of course, if it's proven that each time you create one it actually forms a micro universe of living creatures and progresses it millions of years before you kill it through apparant neglect, then you're going to have a problem with religious people.
But you'd still have the key.
Alternately, you'd have still gotten the message you set the secure channel up for.
-Adam
Re:Not necessarily (Score:2)
Re:Not necessarily (Score:1)
Re:Not necessarily (Score:1)
explanation (Score:3, Funny)
without external influences... from *OUR* universe... (eerie zither music ensues...)
( Zorg: Let's mess with their Qbits again.. hee hee)
( P'teem: Har!Har! Zorg! I never get tired of screwing up lesser beings!)
DRAM? (Score:2)
Why not? DRAM state information evaporates much quicker, which is why there is DRAM refresh circuitry that cycles through it, reading each byte and writing it back out. Why can't the same thing be done for quantum memory.
IANAQP, so I apologize if this is a dumb question.
Re:DRAM? (Score:2)
Re:DRAM? (Score:2)
Evaporation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cart ahead of the horse? (Score:1)
Also, how would you suggest we go about learning about QM without trying things with it?
That's like telling the Wright brothers, "Hey, this flight thing. What do you really know about it? I mean, c'mon, you guys are bicycle makers!"
Nothing was ever gained through not trying things out.
I used to play with Qbits when I was a kid (Score:4, Funny)
Wait... did I read that right???
Re:I used to play with Qbits when I was a kid (Score:2)
Nothing is quite so fun as an isometric game with a 8-way joystick. I picked up an implementation of Marble Madness for my kids' Gameboy, but it's just too darn hard to play. You can map the four diagonal directions to the 4 diagonals of the pad, which is highly-counterintuitive from a "muscle-memory" point of view (at least for someone with 20+ years of playing games with cursor keys), or you can map it to the 4 regular directions and constantly m
"In A Second Or Less"? (Score:2)
Re:"In A Second Or Less"? (Score:1, Informative)
The problem with this is that if we don't find a work around, there is an upper bound on how large a quantum comp
A question: (Score:1)
Physicists are humans too, dammit! (Score:2)
Quantum Computing Crash Course (Score:4, Informative)
Ok, let's say you have a single qubit. Its state is described by a complex valued unit vector a|0>+b|1>. |0> and |1> is just shorthand for the vectors {1,0} and {0,1}. If you measure the qubit, the probability of getting a 0 is |a|^2 and a 1 is |b|^2.
You may be asking why it's necessary to have a complex valued vector space. This is because quantum gates are represented by complex valued matrices. This means that you can have a gate that acts differently on sqrt(2)/2(|0>+|1>) and sqrt(2)/2(|0>+i|1>) even though they both have the same chance of coming up as 0 and 1.
If you have a qubit in an unknown state you have no way of determining what a and b are. If you measure a qubit and it comes up as 0 then it's in the state |0> and if it's 1 then it's in the state |1>. You can also measure the qubit with respect to other bases. For example you can measure it with respect to |+>=sqrt(2)/2(|0>+|1>) and |->=sqrt(2)/2(|0>-|1>). The probability of getting |+> is equal to the absolute value of the square of the projection of the state vector onto |+>. If the result comes out as |+> then the qubit is in the state |+>.
You can't copy qubits without destroying the original. However, you can entangle qubits together so that their values are dependent on eachother. Understanding the entanglement between qubits in a quantum algorithm is of critical importance and it really makes quantum algorithms a lot harder to understand than classical algorithms.
Systems of two qubits are represented by vector spaces spanned by |00>,|01>,|10>, and |11>. Larger systems are represented similarly. Gates acting on multiple qubits are represented by unitary matrices (basically they map unit vectors to unit vectors). There are infinitely many quantum gates, but they can be approximated to infinite accuracy by using a handful of single qubit gates and CNOT gates. CNOT maps |00> to |00>, |01> to |01>, |10> to |11> and |11> to |10>.
I hope that at least some of you can follow all that.
Re:Quantum Computing Crash Course (Score:3, Informative)
Yes. Those of us that already understood qbits generally followed it.
Those who did not already understand qbits were lost by the first | character.
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Oh god. (Score:1, Offtopic)
"Netherlands Organiztion for Scientific Research provies a human-readable description of research into the stability of Qbits conducted at Leiden University. The bad news: " Much to their surprise they discovered that the coherence tends to spontaneously disappear, even without external influences." The whole story in physicist-readable form is in the June 17 Physical Review Letters by van Wezel, van den Brink,
Re:Oh god. (Score:2)
HJ
same as quantum entanglement collapsing ? (Score:1)
They Should Known (Score:2)
Re:They Should Known (Score:2)
No. There'd be one. And all of it would be entangled. That's the definition of a BEC.
"The same would be true in a universe made of quark gluon plasma."
No again. It'd have one form of matter. Entanglement might be broken, but there'd be no way there could be anything to try to quantum compute with or anyone to want to.
"Another flaw in the fine article.The
A refreshing thought (Score:2)
Ever heard of DRAM?
If its good for a second... (Score:2, Interesting)
Simple solution? (Score:2)
vacuum tubes (Score:2, Insightful)
This is still experimental, so of course it's not consumer ready; ENIAC [wikipedia.org] was built in 1946, and we're not even there yet. I'm sure there are folks on Slashdot who will never get to use a quantum computer first-hand, which sounds depressing,
mirages (Score:2)
Noah's Arq... (Score:3, Funny)
If they ever build a quantum grid computer, they should make it 300 qbits long, 50 qbits wide, and 30 qbits high...
So? Cope! See DRAM. (Score:2)
Last time I Checked.... (Score:1)
Cool it... (Score:1)