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When we listen to our favorite song, what sounds like a continuous wave of music is actually transmitted as tiny packets of quantum particles called phonons.
The laws of quantum mechanics hold that quantum particles are fundamentally indivisible and therefore cannot be split, but researchers at the Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering (PME) at the University of Chicago are exploring what happens when you try to split a phonon.
In two experimentsthe first of their kindsa team led by Prof. Andrew Cleland used a device called an acoustic beamsplitter to "split" phonons and thereby demonstrate their quantum properties. By showing that the beamsplitter can be used to both induce a special quantum superposition state for one phonon, and further create interference between two phonons, the research team took the first critical steps toward creating a new kind of quantum computer.
The results are published in the journal Science and built on years of breakthrough work on phonons by the team at Pritzker Molecular Engineering.
In the experiments, researchers used phonons that have roughly a million times higher pitch than can be heard with the human ear. Previously, Cleland and his team figured out how to create and detect single phonons and were the first to entangle two phonons.
To demonstrate these phonons' quantum capabilities, the teamincluding Cleland's graduate student Hong Qiaocreated a beamsplitter that can split a beam of sound in half, transmitting half and reflecting the other half back to its source (beamsplitters already exist for light and have been used to demonstrate the quantum capabilities of photons). The whole system, including two qubits to generate and detect phonons, operates at extremely low temperatures and uses individual surface acoustic wave phonons, which travel on the surface of a material, in this case lithium niobate.
However, quantum physics says a single phonon is indivisible. So when the team sent a single phonon to the beamsplitter, instead of splitting, it went into a quantum superposition, a state where the phonon is both reflected and transmitted at the same time. Observing (measuring) the phonon causes this quantum state to collapse into one of the two outputs.
The team found a way to maintain that superposition state by capturing the phonon in two qubits. A qubit is the basic unit of information in quantum computing. Only one qubit actually captures the phonon, but researchers cannot tell which qubit until post-measurement. In other words, the quantum superposition is transferred from the phonon to the two qubits. The researchers measured this two-qubit superposition, yielding "gold standard proof that the beamsplitter is creating a quantum entangled state," Cleland said.
In the second experiment, the team wanted to show an additional fundamental quantum effect that had first been demonstrated with photons in the 1980s. Now known as the Hong-Ou-Mandel effect, when two identical photons are sent from opposite directions into a beamsplitter at the same time, the superposed outputs interfere so that both photons are always found traveling together, in one or the other output directions.
Importantly, the same happened when the team did the experiment with phononsthe superposed output means that only one of the two detector qubits captures phonons, going one way but not the other. Though the qubits only have the ability to capture a single phonon at a time, not two, the qubit placed in the opposite direction never "hears" a phonon, giving proof that both phonons are going in the same direction. This phenomenon is called two-phonon interference.
Getting phonons into these quantum-entangled state is a much bigger leap than doing so with photons. The phonons used here, though indivisible, still require quadrillions of atoms working together in a quantum mechanical fashion. And if quantum mechanics rules physics at only the tiniest realm, it raises questions of where that realm ends and classical physics begins; this experiment further probes that transition.
"Those atoms all have to behave coherently together to support what quantum mechanics says they should do," Cleland said. "It's kind of amazing. The bizarre aspects of quantum mechanics are not limited by size."
The power of quantum computers lies in the "weirdness" of the quantum realm. By harnessing the strange quantum powers of superposition and entanglement, researchers hope to solve previously intractable problems. One approach to doing this is to use photons, in what is called a "linear optical quantum computer."
A linear mechanical quantum computerwhich would use phonons instead of photonsitself could have the ability to compute new kinds of calculations. "The success of the two-phonon interference experiment is the final piece showing that phonons are equivalent to photons," Cleland said. "The outcome confirms we have the technology we need to build a linear mechanical quantum computer."
Unlike photon-based linear optical quantum computing, the University of Chicago platform directly integrates phonons with qubits. That means phonons could further be part of a hybrid quantum computer that combines the best of linear quantum computers with the power of qubit-based quantum computers.
The next step is to create a logic gatean essential part of computingusing phonons, on which Cleland and his team are currently conducting research.
Other authors on the paper include . Dumur, G. Andersson, H. Yan, M.-H. Chou, J. Grebel, C. R. Conner, Y. J. Joshi, J. M. Miller, R. G. Povey, and X. Wu.
More information: H. Qiao et al, Splitting phonons: Building a platform for linear mechanical quantum computing, Science (2023). DOI: 10.1126/science.adg8715. http://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adg8715
Journal information: Science
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