AXE 3.26% 44.5¢ archer materials limited

A quirky issue.QUANTUM COMPUTING RESEARCH UPDATECosmic-ray...

  1. 595 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 146
    A quirky issue.

    QUANTUM COMPUTING RESEARCH UPDATE
    Cosmic-ray threat to quantum computing greater than previously thought 28 Jul 2021
    Margaret HarrisCosmic intruders: Energetic particles from space and natural background radiation can trigger hard-to-correct errors when they collide with chips containing superconducting qubits. (Courtesy: Chris Wilen)Quantum computers may need a redesign to protect them from background radiation, say physicists. After earlier experiments showed that cosmic rays can severely disrupt the operation of superconducting quantum bits (qubits), an international team led by Robert McDermott of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, US, has now concluded that a leading error-correction method is unlikely to fix the problem on its own. Instead, McDermott and colleagues suggest that a combination of shielding and changes in qubit chip design may be required to keep errors at a manageable level.Cosmic rays have created headaches in classical computing for decades. When these energetic particles fly in from space and strike a silicon computer chip, one or more bits in the chip may change state, or flip, in ways that programmers never intended. If these errors go uncorrected, damaging glitches may result – including, in one case, injuries to passengers on a Qantas flight after a bit-flip error fed incorrect data to the aeroplane’s instruments.Surface code error correctionFor quantum computers, the problem is more complicated since qubit states can flip in two directions (representing the X and Z axes) rather than one. Nevertheless, a form of error correction known as a two-dimensional surface code should, in principle, be able to handle qubit flips as long as the quantum processor meets certain requirements.Surface code error correction works by encoding information in a flat sheet of superconducting qubits, each of which is connected to its nearest neighbours. If the error rates of individual qubit operations are low enough, it should be possible to use some of these qubits to identify and correct errors in neighbouring qubits via multi-qubit operations. The other requirement is that errors cannot be correlated – in other words, an error that affects one qubit cannot affect its neighbours at the same time.Unfortunately, McDermott’s team discovered that errors caused by cosmic rays and gamma rays from background radiation do not meet this second condition. “We basically are finding multiple mechanisms for correlated errors,” Chris Wilen, a PhD student at Wisconsin and the lead author of a new study about the research, tells Physics World.Quasiparticle poisoningTo study these correlated errors and quantify their effects, McDermott and colleagues constructed a chip containing two pairs of qubits: one pair separated by 340 μm, the other by 640 μm. While performing quantum operations on this four-qubit system, the physicists observed numerous simultaneous jumps in the charge induced on the paired qubits. When they modelled these bursts of charge using a standard particle-physics toolkit, they determined that the correlated jumps stem from collisions between the chip and a mixture of gamma rays and cosmic rays.The probability of correlated jumps was highest for the qubit pair with the smallest physical separation, indicating that spacing qubits further apart reduces the direct effects of energetic particles striking the chip. However, the group also encountered a thornier problem: the energy released in these strikes ultimately gets transferred to the qubit substrate in the form of phonons, which are vibrations in a material and can lead to the creation of quasiparticles. As these phonons spread, they produce other kinds of correlated errors, and these errors affect the entire millimetre-scale chip. This phenomenon is known as quasiparticle poisoning, and Wilen says it “could be really damaging for error correction” unless it can be mitigated.READ MORECosmic challenge: protecting supercomputers from an extraterrestrial threatWriting in Nature, the researchers suggest two possible solutions. One is to protect the quantum processor by shielding it with lead and shifting it to an underground site, as is already done for dark matter and neutrino detection experiments that are especially sensitive to radiation. Another is to reduce the sensitivity of the qubits by, for example, adding materials to the chip that can trap quasiparticles or funnel them away from the qubit substrate. “It’s a roadblock that we’re going to get over,” Wilen says, adding that the Wisconsin group plans to explore several of these mitigation strategies in the future.Chunyang Ding contributed reporting to this article.Want to read more?Register to unlock all the content on the siteE-MAIL ADDRESS RegisterMargaret Harris is an online editor of Physics World Quantum Science & Technologies BriefingThis issue explores quantum computing, quantum materials and quantum simulationREAD PREVIOUSCRYOSPHERE RESEARCH UPDATESolar radio waves could help monitor glacier thicknessREAD NEXTBIOPHYSICS AND BIOENGINEERING RESEARCH UPDATEAcoustoelectronic nanotweezers manoeuvre minute particlesDiscover more from Physics WorldQUANTUM COMPUTING RESEARCH UPDATEHighly programmable quantum simulator operates with up to 256 qubits QUANTUM MECHANICS OPINION AND REVIEWSAn interactive play where quantum physics and psychology collide QUANTUM COMPUTING RESEARCH UPDATEMajorana modes continue to eludeRelated jobsUNITED KINGDOM | UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGEThe Ray Dolby Professorship of Theoretical and Experimental PhysicsSPAIN | ICFO - THE INSTITUTE OF PHOTONIC SCIENCESPhD Positions: ICFO PhD Program (Fall 2021)SWITZERLAND | ZURICH INSTRUMENTSApplication Scientist Quantum Technology Related eventsINSTRUMENTATION AND MEASUREMENT | VIRTUAL EVENTMicroscopy and Microanalysis (M&M) Meeting 20211—5 August 2021QUANTUM | CONFERENCEQuantum Mechanics and Nuclear Physics World Forum 20214—6 October 2021 | Amsterdam, NetherlandsQUANTUM | WORKSHOPProbing Complex Quantum Dynamics Through Out-of-time-ordered Correlators11—15 October 2021 | Dresden, Germany EXPLORE PHYSICS WORLDAbout usOur teamOur portfolioAdvertisingContact usFeedbackSign inRegister MORE INFORMATIONInstitute of PhysicsJoin the InstituteModern Slavery ActPrivacy and CookiesIOP PublishingCopyrightTerms and ConditionsDisclaimer OUR MISSIONPhysics World represents a key part of IOP Publishing's mission to communicate world-class research and innovation to the widest possible audience. The website forms part of the Physics World portfolio, a collection of online, digital and print information services for the global scientific community.Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on LinkedIn Watch us on Youtube RSS FeedBACK TO TOP
 
watchlist Created with Sketch. Add AXE (ASX) to my watchlist
(20min delay)
Last
44.5¢
Change
-0.015(3.26%)
Mkt cap ! $113.4M
Open High Low Value Volume
46.0¢ 46.0¢ 44.5¢ $36.43K 80.73K

Buyers (Bids)

No. Vol. Price($)
2 21432 44.5¢
 

Sellers (Offers)

Price($) Vol. No.
45.5¢ 13500 1
View Market Depth
Last trade - 16.10pm 13/05/2024 (20 minute delay) ?
Last
45.0¢
  Change
-0.015 ( 1.12 %)
Open High Low Volume
45.0¢ 45.8¢ 44.5¢ 32152
Last updated 15.53pm 13/05/2024 ?
AXE (ASX) Chart
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.