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Searching for Black Matter on Quantum Computers, Light Blip of Time

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For decades, scientists have struggled to explain the elements that comprise the quarter of the universe: the dark matter. As experiments continue to unfold, one group hopes to find something dark by introducing laws that govern quantum mechanics and a kind of technology called quantum computer. That's what brought Fermilab scientist, Daniel Bowring, with his background in accelerator physics, into the computer lab of David Schuster's affiliate at the University of Chicago. “For the first time in there, I felt like Charlie had come into Willie Wonka's factory,” he said.

Today, the testing center is located in Fermilab, just outside of Batavia, Illinois, with a vaulted ceiling and a black tower of physics machines on the stairwell in the storage area, separated by glass separators. When I visited Fermilab in January, the usual computer stuff was sitting on a tall wall: an electronic tower with bright lights and a computer-lined table next to a man-made cylinder hanging in a metal cage, called a dilution refrigerator that keeps superconducting parts working absolute zero. The room had some nice sounds as the refrigerator pumps liquid helium, while Bowring, Fermilab research partner, Rakshya Khatiwada, and Akash Dixit and Ankur Agrawal graduate students from the University of Chicago. It's called QISMET, a short version of Quantum Information Science Metrology, though Bowerring hates acronyms.

QISMET Examination
Pictures: Ryan Mandelbaum (Gizmodo)

Modern quantum computers are limited in their power, passing through only a few algorithms that are widely used as random number generators, but quantum computer makers hope that these devices will one day be able to solve problems that ordinary computers cannot. But sensory boundaries have driven one black-search team to build a black matter detector at the same guts as a quantum computer. Their device built at Fermilab reinforces the extreme feeling as one of the world's first real applications of quantum technology.

Bowring recognizes that experiments include two extremes of extreme physics, and he worries about how hype in the field can affect quantum science funding in general. "When I tell people that I use qubits to search for something dark," he said, "I feel bored and I often try hard to explain that we came from the truth, and we think this technology is too strong a technology to allow us to seek higher axions."

"When I tell people that I use qubits to search for something dark, I hear a little color and I often try hard to explain that we came from the truth, and we think this technology is the strongest technology to allow us to seek higher axions."

Different types of black screening live in complex environments such as International Naval Station and in the depths of the mountains, where they hunt for the sign of new particles in tons of liquid xenon, sapphire crystals, and particle collision. Perhaps the most popular character to describe all gravitational forces is a new class of fundamental particles that do not fit well with the general matter, aptly referred to as large, easily connected particles, or WIMPs. While searches for WIMPs move on get nothing, some scientists have been hunting down another well-known person called axion, a basic particle named after the laundry detergent.

Stars are popular because, like WIMPs, they solve the mystery of the dark matter in space and the mystery surrounding the operation of the underlying particles. In the case of axion, that problem is called a strong CP problem. The energy that holds atomic nuclei together is called gravity, and, based on what we know about other forces, there is no reason for the laws of physics to be the same when you replace a particle with the same particle but when you charge opposite (C) and equals (P). However, somehow, the particles that encounter the energy are saving the device. 1960s magician Roberto Peccei and Helen Quinn invented the theory to help explain the preservation of these structures. Later, physicists Frank Wilczek and Steven Weinberg realized that the theory made room for a new light particle called axion. But if the axions were there, they would have buildings I can describe the dark "cold" thing, the kind of dark matter that they think is moving across the universe: the many, slow particles that experience the greatest energy that travels over long distances. So physicists have started looking for their symptoms.

Fermilab device calibration measurements in Illinois.
Pictures: Ryan Mandelbaum (Gizmodo)

The bending occurs Axion Dark Matter in Xperiment, or ADMX, among the oldest axion-hunting experiments. The ADMX is a magnetic-mounted antennae on the underside, with an adjustable turning rod that adjusts the frequency of the photographic images – electromagnetic radiation particles – sensitive. Physicists say that axons are converted into images in the presence of strong magnetic fields, and ADMX testing involves rotating a rod gradually to exceed certain image frequencies, such as driving a radio. Unless the signal is so weak it's like trying to pick up a phone from Mars using a mobile tower in the world, Bowring said.

If the signals from the axons have a frequency higher than a few GHz, then phones emitted by anything in the temperature experiment can pull the signal, or with the help of things such as amplifiers. Amplifiers come with their own limitations; those used in ADMX require Photon phase information and quantities simultaneously. But the basic idea of ​​quantum mechanics, an uncertain principle, states that certain combinations of properties cannot be measured exactly, combinations include amplitude and phase. Researchers are just curious about whether or not axons are present, so they need a system that can increase the sensitivity of the photon height test, regardless of what their other properties are.

ADMX team members realized they could use quantum computer technology to solve their quantum problem. "It's not enough to care about microwave pictures," explained Bowring. "We needed people who care about one photon microwave at a time." That has brought them into the quantum computing community.

The Quaker at Fermilab in Illinois.
Pictures: Ryan Mandelbaum (Gizmodo)

In 2007, physicist David Schuster, who was at Yale, asked his advisor about how qubits could work in detecting astronomy — after all, the quantum computer component, qubit, is actually a light wave. However, his advisor replied that the device would not use astrology, as it would not receive images unless it magically appeared inside the Qubit area. "There were weaknesses, but it was only good to get things in the spine," Schuter said.

Nearly a decade later, Schuster, now a professor at the University of Chicago, had traveled to Fermilab to talk about superconducting radiofrequency symptoms with another group and went back to Fermilab along with expert Aaron Chou. Chou had heard about Schuster's fighting symptoms and knew of Schuster's interest in using qubits to hear. Theory says that when the axions collide inside a very powerful magnet, they turn into computers – causing them to magically explode inside the box. They have introduced an application where a dose computer can lead to a practical experiment in astronomy.

Quantum computers are technologically only computers if you use them to make computations; otherwise, their qubits are simply systems of atoms. The most popular qubit design feature consists of superconducting cord wires that are moving now without resistance, broken by a small piece of equipment in a region called the Josephson junction. Each of these forces obeys the same laws of quantum mechanics that an electron can move around an atom: in front of the right frequency icon, it enters an excited state, represented in a loop as a small current through a wire. But unlike an atom electron, the qubits radiate in response to a range of photon frequencies rather than the individual waves as an atom, explained Bowring.

QISMET is not a quantum computer because it does not perform any calculations, but is based on the same technology. Each of the QISMET superconducting quipits is a piece of glass that can sit on your nail and insert the inserted antennae, black lines in the glass that are visible to the naked eye when you turn away. The superconducting microscopic loop, barely visible between the black lines.

The transerconducting radiofrequency patity was placed in a refrigeration freezer at Fermilab in Illinois — part of a quantum computer an experiment conducted by physicist Alex Romanenko.
Pictures: Ryan Mandelbaum (Gizmodo)

Diitit, one of the graduate students at the University of Chicago, has taken me through the process of axion detection: First, place a radiofrequency cavity, an empty box with its walls acting as a mirror for absorbing photons in, inside a solid magnet, so the ax turned into images. When a photon appears, transfer that Photon to another radiofrequency cavity containing a qubit (superconducting technology can resist in a magnetic field). Use the radio transistors to measure the boundary time and again, to see that a happier atmosphere than a random one will allow, and only when you do it. If so, then (blocking any further interpretation) QISMET has received axons.

A small group went from an empty lab to a technology program in less than a year, Khatiwada told me. He joined QISMET as a cryogenic electronics expert from ADMX and was attracted to the experimental photon sensor. "I want to do a better test for axons," he said. “It was this need to make search better and more sensitive. ”

QISMET has the same problem as other quantum computers, Dixit explains. "We know that qubits can count pictures, but they also make many mistakes," he said. "We want to know how to check all these errors." That means to make sure that the patity is as empty as possible and that it maintains the axion image for as long as possible and that the researchers understand the ability of the qubit to accidentally switch to an excited uncharted region. Chou said in an email that it would be another year before the team finished issuing test contracts.

Some scientists have begun to incorporate quantum intuition into the dark research of their own subjects, such as the axion-stability study of HAYSTAC or Fermilab scientist Alex Romanenko & # 39; s Dark SRF, who is trying to produce an independent matter behind the radiercreuctency cavity and find another one.

Retirement units on the main campus of Fermilab.
Pictures: Ryan Mandelbaum (Gizmodo)

Following the tests has pushed both fields forward, Fermilab chief technology officer Anna Grasselino told Gizmodo. "I would say that technology is accelerating this investigation, but the search itself gives us the impetus to continue to explore technology in the pricing regime," he said. Quantum computer technology and axion hunting share a related but ultimately very different purpose, which extends the field in general; Dixit said that many companies working on creating quantum computers do not think of measurement errors in the same way as the QISMET team should — they require some very low rates.

Some of the biggest challenges in basic science applications like this are, says Botring, human resource development. IBM, Google, Intel, Microsoft and other big-money companies all follow quantum technology in a space with a small pool of potential talent. Bowring may offer a prospective graduate to complete a postgraduate degree in post-doctoral research, while a technology company may offer more than that. "We can go as fast as we can with the staff," he said.

But once QISMET is up and running, it will show the real benefit of quantum technology over existing sensing solutions, almost before companies like Google and IBM & # 39; s quantum computers have useful computer applications. The work demonstrates the importance of basic research in pushing technological boundaries to solve problems that only natural scientists, as a means of finding the underlying particle may not exist. The experimental scientists are not trying to develop a product that can one day generate profit; they are driven by a powerful, mysterious force of consciousness.

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