Christopher Monroe - “Quantum Computing with Trapped Ions”

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Stanford University
    APPLIED PHYSICS/PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM
    The Paul Kirkpatrick Awards will be presented at the start of this colloquium
    Tuesday, May 15, 2018
    4:30 p.m. on campus in Hewlett Teaching Center, Rm. 201
    Christopher Monroe
    University of Maryland
    “Quantum Computing with Trapped Ions”
    Individual atoms are standards for quantum information technology, acting as qubits that have unsurpassed levels of quantum coherence, can be replicated and scaled with the atomic clock accuracy, and allow near-perfect measurement. Atomic ions can be confined by silicon-based chip traps with lithographically-defined electrodes under high vacuum in a room temperature environment. Entangling quantum gate operations can be mediated with control laser beams, allowing the qubit connectivity graph to be reconfigured and optimally adapted to a given algorithm or mode of quantum computing. Existing work has shown 99.9% fidelity gate operations, fully-connected control with up to about 10 qubits, and quantum simulations with over 50 qubits. I will speculate on combining all this into a single universal quantum computing device that can be co-designed with future quantum applications and scaled to useful dimensions.

Комментарии • 4

  • @luccahuguet
    @luccahuguet 3 года назад +3

    Very good presentation. Thank you.

  • @ares12265
    @ares12265 6 лет назад +1

    Quantum allows us to use the relativity of numbers, it is very convenient.

  • @whatusayingangsta3642
    @whatusayingangsta3642 2 года назад

    Does anyone see lots of potential in Rigetti? Going the super conducted route instead of trapped ions

  • @billrussell3955
    @billrussell3955 6 лет назад

    Is the hardware built up around antipodal points? Over spheres or cylinders like a carbon nano tube?
    I work with magnetics. But not at the atomic scale. Enjoyed watching it. One of these days it would be cool to see SLAC and the Campus.