University of California, Santa Barbara
 

UCSB  >  INSTITUTIONAL ADVANCEMENT  >  PUBLIC AFFAIRS

 
PRESS RELEASE

DEPARTMENT LINKS

Public Affairs Office

Featured News

Press Release Archives

Featured News Archives

93106

UC Santa Barbara Today

Key Staff Contacts

OTHER NEWS LINKS

Academic Conferences

Campus Topics

Coastlines

Convergence Magazine

Daily Nexus

Education News

Engineering News

Featured Events

KCSB-FM

Parent Newsletter

Points of Pride

UC Newswire

UC-TV


Physicists at UC Santa Barbara Make Discovery in Quantum Mechanics

September 23, 2009

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Physicists at UC Santa Barbara have made an important advance in quantum mechanics using a superconducting electrical circuit. The finding is reported in this week's issue of the journal Nature.

The researchers showed that they could detect the quantum correlations in the results of measurements of entangled quantum bits, using a superconducting electrical circuit. The correlations are stronger than can be obtained using classical (non-quantum mechanical) physics, and according to the physicists, this illustrates that the oddities of quantum mechanics clearly extend to macroscopic systems. The work is part of an ongoing collaboration between the UCSB laboratories of John Martinis and Andrew Cleland.

The results of measurements in quantum mechanics are intrinsically unpredictable, according to the theory of quantum mechanics, and yet still contain very strong correlations, in contradiction with classical physics. In particular, measurements of "entangled states," such as a pair of particles with opposite spins, allow stringent tests of the predicted discrepancy between quantum and classical physics, as described by the "Bell inequalities." Measuring such a discrepancy is known as a "Bell violation."

According to quantum theory, Bell violations should be detectable using "qubits," superconducting quantum bits, but measuring these violations is technologically challenging. Martinis, Cleland, and their colleagues have overcome these challenges, and report a clear violation of Bell's inequality with two entangled superconducting qubits. Thus, they have demonstrated that this macroscopic electrical circuit is a quantum system.

The measurement of a Bell violation in a superconducting circuit was recently stated to be the next primary challenge for the superconducting qubit community, according to Martinis.

Martinis said: "This experiment has met this challenge, achieved by performing a very demanding measurement on a pair of Josephson qubits, a measurement that requires excellent control over qubit state preparation, qubit entanglement, and very high fidelity single-shot state measurements of the entangled qubits. It directly proves that quantum mechanics is the only possible description for the behavior of a macroscopic electrical circuit."

Additional co-authors on the paper (all at UCSB at the time of the research) are: Markus Ansmann, Haohua Wang, Radoslaw C. Biaalczak, Max Hofheinz, Erik Lucero, Matthew Neeley, Aaron D. O'Connell, Daniel Sank, Martin Weides, and James Wenner.

###

(43)


CONTACT

Gail Gallessich

805-893-7220

George Foulsham

805-893-3071

FEATURED RESEARCHERS

John Martinis

Andrew Cleland

RELATED LINKS

Martinis Group

Cleland Group

Utilities

E-mail This Story

Print-Friendly Version

Copyright © The Regents of the University of California, All Rights Reserved.
UCSB, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara CA 93106 (805) 893-8000
Site Map About Our Site Terms of Use Contact Us Text-Only Accessibility
Last Modified February 5, 2008