The race to find the best quantum bit (qubit)
Post Doc Henrik Ingerslev Jørgensen from the Nano-Science Center
has come an important step closer to the quantum computer. The
journal Nature Physics has just published the researcher’s
groundbreaking discovery.
- Our results give us, for the first time, the possibility to
understand the interaction between just two electrons placed
next to each other in a carbon nanotube. A groundbreaking
discovery, which is fundamental for the creation of a quantum
mechanical bit, a so-called quantum bit – the cornerstone of a
quantum computer, explains Henrik Jørgensen, who is one of the
many researchers competing on an international level to be the
first to make a quantum bit in a carbon nanotube.
The ability to produce a quantum computer is still some years
ahead in the future, the implementation will, however, mean a
revolution within the computer industry. This is due to the
quantum mechanical computation method, which quickly will be
able to solve certain complicated calculations that on an
ordinary computer would take more than the lifetime of the
Universe to calculate.
Who will be the first?
Over the past years there has been a tremendously increasing
interest in developing a quantum computer within the
international world of researchers. The production of a quantum
computer is enormously challenging and demands development of
new theories and new technologies by research-groups all over
the world. Henrik Jørgensen’s results have been developed in
close collaboration with the Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory in
England. Adviser and Vice-Chairman at the Nano-Science Center,
Professor Poul Erik Lindelof, says:
– We have been studying the quantum mechanical properties of
carbon nanotubes for ten years, and today we are one of the
leading laboratories within this field of research. I believe
Henrik Jørgensen’s experimental work can prove to be just the
right way forward.
Kasper Grove Rasmussen is joint author of the article. He says:
– We use carbon nanotubes due to their unique electronic and
material properties and not least due to the absence of
disturbing magnetism from the atom nuclei which is found in
certain competing materials. At present it is not possible to
say which material will be the most suitable for the quantum
computer, or who will be the first to realize a quantum bit in a
carbon nanotube, but the researchers at the Nano-Science Center
are a big step closer to the solution.
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