Researchers Create Silicon-Based Quantum Bit
angry tapir writes "Researchers at the University of New South Wales in Australia have created the world's first working quantum bit based on a single atom in silicon. The research team was able to both read and write information using the spin, or magnetic orientation, of an electron bound to a single phosphorous atom embedded in a silicon chip. In February, UNSW researchers revealed they had successfully created a single-atom transistor using a single phosphorous atom in a silicon crystal."
They show relatively clear Rabi oscillations, which are a definite proof of the quantumness of the evolution of their system (which has nothing to do with entanglement). So, yes, this is a genuine qubit, albeit not a perfect one.
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No, they've demonstrated a single Qubit.
TFS makes things mucky by mentioning single electron transistors too, which are a completely different beast.
The problem with quantum computing isn't demonstrating single qubits though. The problem is in getting a reasonable number in a superposition. Most I've ever seen in a QC that actually does computations is 7 qubits.
Just to get an idea of the scale we need, Shor's algorithm, the one which we could use to crack RSA encryption in polynomial time, needs 2*N qubits minimum. So to crack RSA1024 we'd need 2048 qubits all in a state of superposition.
I'm of the opinion adding more qubits to a superposition is going to be an exponentially hard problem.
can you run linux on it?
Nope. Linux requires at least a two bit computer to run.
First Evidence of Quantum Tunnelling Slashdot Post Dismissed as Human Error.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.