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Qubit

About: Qubit is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 29978 publications have been published within this topic receiving 723084 citations. The topic is also known as: quantum bit & qbit.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that 2log3N is the maximal perfect communication distance for hypercube geometries if one allows fixed but different couplings between the qubits, then perfect state transfer can be achieved over arbitrarily long distances in a linear chain.
Abstract: We propose a class of qubit networks that admit the perfect state transfer of any quantum state in a fixed period of time. Unlike many other schemes for quantum computation and communication, these networks do not require qubit couplings to be switched on and off. When restricted to N-qubit spin networks of identical qubit couplings, we show that 2log3N is the maximal perfect communication distance for hypercube geometries. Moreover, if one allows fixed but different couplings between the qubits, then perfect state transfer can be achieved over arbitrarily long distances in a linear chain.

1,014 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a colloquium-style introduction to the midgap excitations in superconductors known as Majorana fermions is given, along with strategies to detect them in a topological superconductor, as well as possible applications in a quantum computer.
Abstract: This is a colloquium-style introduction to the midgap excitations in superconductors known as Majorana fermions. These elusive particles, equal to their own antiparticle, may or may not exist in Nature as elementary building blocks, but in condensed matter they can be constructed out of electron and hole excitations. What is needed is a superconductor to hide the charge difference, and a topological (Berry) phase to eliminate the energy difference from zero-point motion. A pair of widely separated Majorana fermions, bound to magnetic or electrostatic defects, has non-Abelian exchange statistics. A qubit encoded in this Majorana pair is expected to have an unusually long coherence time. We discuss strategies to detect Majorana fermions in a topological superconductor, as well as possible applications in a quantum computer. The status of the experimental search is reviewed. Contents: I. What Are They? (Their origin in particle physics; Their emergence in superconductors; Their potential for quantum computing) II. How to Make Them (Shockley mechanism; Chiral p-wave superconductors; Topological insulators; Semiconductor heterostructures) III. How to Detect Them (Half-integer conductance quantization; Nonlocal tunneling; 4\pi-periodic Josephson effect; Thermal metal-insulator transition) IV. How to Use Them (Topological qubits; Read out; Braiding) V. Outlook on the Experimental Progress [scheduled for vol. 4 of Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics]

1,008 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reported the creation of Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states with up to 14 qubits by investigating the coherence of up to 8 ions over time and observed a decay proportional to the square of the number of qubits.
Abstract: We report the creation of Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states with up to 14 qubits. By investigating the coherence of up to 8 ions over time, we observe a decay proportional to the square of the number of qubits. The observed decay agrees with a theoretical model which assumes a system affected by correlated, Gaussian phase noise. This model holds for the majority of current experimental systems developed towards quantum computation and quantum metrology.

1,008 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
05 Mar 2015-Nature
TL;DR: The protection of classical states from environmental bit-flip errors is reported and the suppression of these errors with increasing system size is demonstrated, motivating further research into the many challenges associated with building a large-scale superconducting quantum computer.
Abstract: Quantum computing becomes viable when a quantum state can be protected from environment-induced error. If quantum bits (qubits) are sufficiently reliable, errors are sparse and quantum error correction (QEC) is capable of identifying and correcting them. Adding more qubits improves the preservation of states by guaranteeing that increasingly larger clusters of errors will not cause logical failure-a key requirement for large-scale systems. Using QEC to extend the qubit lifetime remains one of the outstanding experimental challenges in quantum computing. Here we report the protection of classical states from environmental bit-flip errors and demonstrate the suppression of these errors with increasing system size. We use a linear array of nine qubits, which is a natural step towards the two-dimensional surface code QEC scheme, and track errors as they occur by repeatedly performing projective quantum non-demolition parity measurements. Relative to a single physical qubit, we reduce the failure rate in retrieving an input state by a factor of 2.7 when using five of our nine qubits and by a factor of 8.5 when using all nine qubits after eight cycles. Additionally, we tomographically verify preservation of the non-classical Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger state. The successful suppression of environment-induced errors will motivate further research into the many challenges associated with building a large-scale superconducting quantum computer.

979 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the quantum discord is defined as a measure of the discrepancy between two natural yet different quantum analogs of the classical mutual information, and quantifies quantumness of correlations in bipartite states.
Abstract: Quantum discord, as introduced by Olliver and Zurek [Phys. Rev. Lett. 88, 017901 (2001)], is a measure of the discrepancy between two natural yet different quantum analogs of the classical mutual information. This notion characterizes and quantifies quantumness of correlations in bipartite states from a measurement perspective, and is fundamentally different from the various entanglement measures in the entanglement vs separability paradigm. The phenomenon of nonzero quantum discord is a manifestation of quantum correlations due to noncommutativity rather than due to entanglement, and has interesting and significant applications in revealing the advantage of certain quantum tasks. We will evaluate analytically the quantum discord for a large family of two-qubit states, and make a comparative study of the relationships between classical and quantum correlations in terms of the quantum discord. We furthermore compare the quantum discord with the entanglement of formation, and illustrate that the latter may be larger than the former, although for separable states, the entanglement of formation always vanishes and thus is less than the quantum discord.

972 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,977
20224,380
20213,014
20203,119
20192,594
20182,228