Posted: June 13, 2008

Keeping cool for quantum clarity

(Nanowerk News) Exploiting some of the bizarre features of the quantum world to process information could lead to computers much faster than current ones. The technology relies on scientists being able to clearly realize one unit of quantum information, known as a qubit, which can be encoded in ‘artificial atoms’ made from superconductors.
Now researchers from the RIKEN Advanced Science Institute (formerly the Frontier Research System) in Wako, Japan, have proposed a method to improve the coherence of a superconducting qubit by simultaneously cooling the qubit and its surroundings (" Simultaneous Cooling of an Artificial Atom and Its Neighboring Quantum System").
Conventional technologies can lower the temperature of a nanoscale device to a few hundredths of a degree above absolute zero. However this temperature is still not quite low enough for some quantum devices that require extremely quiet environments free from thermal agitations.
Recently scientists in the US managed to lower the temperature of a superconducting qubit to two orders of magnitude lower than its surroundings ("Microwave-induced cooling of a superconducting qubit"). Their method involves cooling the qubit by transferring it between energy states.
“Thermal noise moves the system from its lowest-energy state to a higher-energy state. Then, additional energy (via microwaves) is added to drive the system to an even higher-energy state,” explains Franco Nori of RIKEN and the University of Michigan, USA. “The higher-energy state is unstable, and allows the system to quickly decay to its lowest energy state; therefore lowering its energy and thus ‘cooling’ the qubit”.
Cooling of an artificial atom
Cooling of an 'artificial atom'
“The only problem with this method is that, while the superconducting qubit is greatly cooled, the noise sources surrounding the qubit are not, so the qubit will quickly warm up again,” explains RIKEN visiting scientist Jianqiang You, also with Fudan University, Shanghai, China. “The new challenge is to maintain the qubit in the cooled state.”
The proposed method also considers a tunable qubit that can be kept in the unstable high-energy state for some time to resonantly interact with the noise sources surrounding the qubit. Thereafter, both the qubit and its neighboring noise sources can be cooled simultaneously. This will significantly enhance the quantum coherence of the qubit because it will take a relatively long time for the cooled qubit to be thermally activated again.
In practice, there are different types of quantum noise. The team’s theory gives similar results for two different noise sources, implying that the cooling could be robust and effective in many surrounding environments. The technique could be applied for cooling mechanical resonators at the nanoscale, providing opportunities to observe the transition between classical and quantum resonant behavior. Reference
Source: RIKEN