Skip to main content

How quantum computers find the right data

 
 

How quantum computers find the right data

The key element of the finding the data in the computer memory is the bookkeeping of the system. That bookkeeping or the card file contains the information the data that the user is looking for can be found. And in the quantum computer that version of the card file can contain the data, which route the data must be travel if the computer wants to find it. 

The Bose-Einstein condensate can form the extreme cold amoeba, which can route data to the right wire. This liquid could be superconducting, and "easy to handle". But keeping the temperature of the superconducting liquid in the level that is near the absolute zero kelvin is the problem. If condensate would touch the layer of the chamber in the wrong point or too early the qubit is useless. Same way if it would lose its superconduction when the temperature rises too high, the condensate is unable to work.  

Use the Bose-Einstein condensate in qubit is one of the most interesting ideas, that I have seen. The idea is that the ultracold liquid condensate would be acting like the amoeba in the chamber, which acts as a neuron. The data will be transmitted to the superconducting liquid, and then the magnet will pull the condensate to the contact layers, which are transmitted the data forward in the linear form. The idea is that the quantum computer has the database, where is the knowledge, what route the data should travel. 

Then the right point of the surface of the qubit is pointed to the laser light, and that light could activate the photoelectric element at the chamber, which pulls the condensate with a magnet to the right point. So at the root of every, each wire is the magnet, and the database what is the card file, where the data can be found will contain the information, what are the wires, what the system must select, for finding the point, where the data, what wanted to process can be found. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Plasmonic waves can make new waves in quantum technology.

"LSU researchers have made a significant discovery related to the fundamental properties and behavior of plasmonic waves, which can lead ot the development of more sensitive and robust quantum technologies. Credit: LSU" (ScitechDaily, Plasmonics Breakthrough Unleashes New Era of Quantum Technologies) Plasmonic waves in the quantum gas are the next-generation tools. The plasmonic wave is quite similar to radio waves. Or, rather say it, a combination of acoustic waves and electromagnetic waves. Quantum gas is an atom group. In those atom groups, temperature and pressure are extremely low.  The distance of atoms is long. And when an electromagnetic system can pump energy to those atoms. But the thing in quantum gas is that the atoms also make physical movements like soundwaves. It's possible. To create quantum gas using monoatomic ions like ionized noble gas. In those systems, positive (or negative) atoms push each other away.  When the box is filled with quantum gas and som

The breakthrough in solid-state qubits.

Hybrid integration of a designer nanodiamond with photonic circuits via ring resonators. Credit Steven Burrows/Sun Group (ScitechDaily, Solid-State Qubits: Artificial Atoms Unlock Quantum Computing Breakthrough) ****************************************** The next part is from ScitechDaily.com "JILA breakthrough in integrating artificial atoms with photonic circuits advances quantum computing efficiency and scalability". (ScitechDaily, Solid-State Qubits: Artificial Atoms Unlock Quantum Computing Breakthrough) "In quantum information science, many particles can act as “bits,” from individual atoms to photons. At JILA, researchers utilize these bits as “qubits,” storing and processing quantum 1s or 0s through a unique system". (ScitechDaily, Solid-State Qubits: Artificial Atoms Unlock Quantum Computing Breakthrough) "While many JILA Fellows focus on qubits found in nature, such as atoms and ions, JILA Associate Fellow and University of Colorado Boulder Assistant

Metamaterials can change their properties in an electric- or electro-optical field.

"Researchers have created a novel metamaterial that can dynamically tune its shape and properties in real-time, offering unprecedented adaptability for applications in robotics and smart materials. This development bridges the gap between current materials and the adaptability seen in nature, paving the way for the future of adaptive technologies. Credit: UNIST" (ScitechDaily, Metamaterial Magic: Scientists Develop New Material That Can Dynamically Tune Its Shape and Mechanical Properties in Real-Time) Metamaterials can change their properties in an electric- or electro-optical field.  An electro-optical activator can also be an IR state, which means. The metamorphosis in the material can thermally activate.  AI is the ultimate tool for metamaterial research. Metamaterials are nanotechnical- or quantum technical tools that can change their properties, like reflection or state from solid to liquid when the electric or optical effect hits that material. The metamaterial can cru