New probe could aid quantum computing

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The colorful patterns formed by the response of superconducting artificial atoms to a new probe called amplitude spectroscopy serve as an identifying fingerprint for a given atom. Image  MIT Lincoln Laboratory
The colorful patterns formed by the response of superconducting 'artificial atoms' to a new probe called amplitude spectroscopy serve as an identifying fingerprint for a given atom. Image / MIT Lincoln Laboratory

(PhysOrg.com) -- MIT researchers may have found a way to overcome a key barrier to the advent of super-fast quantum computers, which could be powerful tools for applications such as code breaking. Ever since Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman first proposed the theory of quantum computing more than two decades ago, researchers have been working to build such a device.


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All News summaries for September 03, 2008

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