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From Atoms to Quantum Computers: the classical and quantum faces of nature

From Atoms to Quantum Computers: the classical and quantum faces of nature. Antonio H. Castro Neto Dartmouth College, November 2003. Newton’s equation: m dx = F d t. 2. 2. Isaac Newton. Particles. Waves. Continuous and Deterministic Universe. Quantum mechanics:

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From Atoms to Quantum Computers: the classical and quantum faces of nature

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  1. From Atoms to Quantum Computers: the classical and quantum faces of nature Antonio H. Castro Neto Dartmouth College, November 2003

  2. Newton’s equation: m dx = F d t 2 2 Isaac Newton

  3. Particles Waves Continuous and Deterministic Universe

  4. Quantum mechanics: A discrete and probabilistic Universe Erwin Schrödinger

  5. i h dY = H Y d t Y = Y + Y 1 2 2 2 2 |Y| = |Y| + |Y| + Y Y + Y Y 1 2 * * 1 2 2 1 Interference

  6. UP DOWN LINEAR SUPERPOSITION

  7. Where do Classical and Quantum Mechanics meet? Schrödinger's cat Y(Life) Y = Y(Life) + Y(Death) Wavefunction Collapse Y(Death)

  8. Schrödinger's cat: molecular magnets

  9. Two-Level System Classical Particle Quantum Particle

  10. <x(t)> Harmonic Oscillator

  11. Ultra small Oscillators: Nanowires -6 Width ~ 10 human hair Courtesy of P.Mohanty BU

  12. Dissipation Coupling to the environment Damped Harmonic Oscillator

  13. Decoherence Universe: system of interest + environment System of interest: y and y Environment: F , < F | F > = 0 n,m=1,2,3... Decoupled at t=0: Y = (y + y ) F |Y | = |y |+|y | + y y + y y After a time t=t : Y = y F + Y F |Y | = |y |+|y | + y y <F |F > + y y <F |F > 1 2 n n m Pure State U 1 2 n -N 2 2 2 * * t = t e D 0 U 1 2 1 2 2 1 Mixture D U 1 n 2 m 2 2 2 * * Classical Result ! U 1 2 1 2 n m 1 2 m n

  14. Jun Kondo Electron moving in a crystal with Magnetic impurities

  15. Kondo effect Spin Flip Multiple Spin flips <S > z

  16. Don Eigler IBM Scanning Tunneling Microscope

  17. Quantum Computation Classical Computer: deterministic and sequential Factorization of: x = x0 20 + x1 21 + …. = (x0 ,x1 ,x2 ,…xN) Solution: Try all primes from 2 to √x → 2N/2 =eN ln(2)/2 Quantum Computer: probabilistic and non-sequential Basis states: y(x0 ,x1 ,x2 ,…xN) Arbitrary state: Y({yi}) = ∑{xi} c{xi}({yi}) y({xi}) Probability: | c{xi}({yi}) |2 Shor’s algorithm: N3 Exponential explosion! Power law growth

  18. Solid State Quantum Computers _Scalable: large number of qubits _States can be initiated with magnetic fields _Quantum gates: qubits must interact _Qubit specific acess Big challenge: How to make the qubits interact and have little decoherence? Use of low dimensional materials – E. Novais, AHCN cond-mat

  19. Quantum Frustration AHCN, E.Novais,L.Borda,G.Zarand and I. Affleck PRL 91, 096401 (2003) Environment with large spin (classical) S=½ The energy is dissipated into two channels coupled to Sx and Sy . However: [Sx ,Sy ] = i ћ Sz

  20. Conclusions _“There is a lot of room at the bottom” R.Feynman _There is a lot of beauty and basic phenomena. _ Experiments are probing the boarders between classical and quantum realities and also the frontiers of technology. _ New theoretical approaches and ideas are required.

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