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Quantum Logic Gate Created Using Excitons

Roland Piquepaille writes "In this article, PhysicsWeb reports that researchers in the U.S. "have taken another important step towards making a quantum computer. [They] have created a logic gate using two electron-hole pairs -- also known as "excitons" -- in a quantum dot." According to Wikipedia, "an exciton is a combination of an electron and a hole in a semiconductor or insulator in an excited state These physicists from the University of Michigan and other labs made a quantum dot by using a thin gallium arsenide layer stuck between two aluminium gallium arsenide barriers. And electrons trapped in the middle layer were excited by light to create a quantum logical gate with four states. The group says this could be useful "in other approaches to quantum computing based on the optical control of electron-spin qubits in quantum dots.." This summary contains more details."

2 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. Is this for quantum or electronic computers? by Urkki · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So they have a quantum gate. But is it just a transistor replacement, which you still would use to build traditional computers, chomping through processor instructions, processing binary (or base 4 or whatever) numbers? Or is for quantum computers working on a completely different paradigm?

  2. Not quite yet by cybermace5 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's nicely done, but not the breakthrough that means quantum computers for all. It is, after all, only a NOT gate. I barely consider NOT as a logic function...more like half a function.

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