First Programmable Quantum Computer Created
Moore’s Law states that approximately every two years, the number of transistors that can be placed on an integrated circuit doubles. This has held true for the last 50 years. But there will come a point one day when physics puts a stop to that. Eventually the boundaries of atomic scale will limit transistor density. However, a new breakthrough in the field of quantum computing may provide hope for future advances. Until now, a quantum computing device had to be designed for one, and only one, operation. But scientists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) have constructed the first programmable quantum processor.
Quantum processing units are fundamentally different in a number of ways. First, where a regular bit can be only 1 or 0, a quantum bit (or qubit) only assumes a value of 1 or 0 when it is observed. Additionally, Quantum computers aren’t bound by Boolean operators like ‘and, ‘or’ and ‘not’. Finally, two qubits can be “entangled”, meaning they will always have the same value when observed, even if separated.
The NIST computer consists of two quantum gates, one single qubit gate and an entangled two qubit gate. The gates utilized two beryllium ions stimulated with UV lasers to represent operations. The test programs run came back with 79% correct results. Certainly not perfect, but a huge step forward. You won’t be dropping one of these into a socket on your motherboard anytime soon, but maybe someday.

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Who
November 19, 2009 at 5:00am
Why does every new tech article have to start with the restating of Moore's defunct law?
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borg343
November 18, 2009 at 7:34pm
Umm, Intersesting photoshop work....
But seriously, I think that quantum computing is a BIG jump in computing technologies
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DBsantos77
November 18, 2009 at 8:13pm
Talk about failure. Fricking text flowing OUT of the box. What a pro. -__-
-Santos
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Xmodgeek
November 18, 2009 at 7:26pm
I've always wondered ever sense I watched those physics shows on the science channel but if you can "entangle" 2 or more partials. As in if you bring one to a high state then the other will follow. Then you could use this for networking perhaps with out any physical connections over vast distances with out the limitations of RF radios. Who knows they could change nearly instantaneously regardless of separation. subspace radio anyone? for NASA's interstellar internet? ;P
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mattman059
November 18, 2009 at 7:07pm
So as far along as this computer is, what implication does this have on computer security, and in particular public key infrastructure (PKI) and encryption? This has always been an area of interest of mine, and i find it absolutely amazing that this was accomplished.
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Belboz99
November 18, 2009 at 6:54pm
I believe he's saying that at this point it won't likely play the 1970's version of "Pong" :P















