| Literature DB >> 21885732 |
Matteo Mariantoni1, H Wang, T Yamamoto, M Neeley, Radoslaw C Bialczak, Y Chen, M Lenander, Erik Lucero, A D O'Connell, D Sank, M Weides, J Wenner, Y Yin, J Zhao, A N Korotkov, A N Cleland, John M Martinis.
Abstract
The von Neumann architecture for a classical computer comprises a central processing unit and a memory holding instructions and data. We demonstrate a quantum central processing unit that exchanges data with a quantum random-access memory integrated on a chip, with instructions stored on a classical computer. We test our quantum machine by executing codes that involve seven quantum elements: Two superconducting qubits coupled through a quantum bus, two quantum memories, and two zeroing registers. Two vital algorithms for quantum computing are demonstrated, the quantum Fourier transform, with 66% process fidelity, and the three-qubit Toffoli-class OR phase gate, with 98% phase fidelity. Our results, in combination especially with longer qubit coherence, illustrate a potentially viable approach to factoring numbers and implementing simple quantum error correction codes.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21885732 DOI: 10.1126/science.1208517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728