‘This computer works almost like a guitar’: Fingernail-sized quantum chip uses vibrations to store data


  • ETH Zurich quantum chip sees superconducting qubit act as CPU and the vibrational states of a fingernail-width acoustic resonator serve as quantum RAM
  • The approach borrows from classical computer architecture as it completely flips the script on how modern quantum computers can store short-term data
  • The team demonstrated a universal gate set and ran small instances of the quantum Fourier transform and period finding

A guitar string essentially stores a note based on how it vibrates, and plucking it differently will play a completely different note.

A team of researchers at ETH Zurich has exploited the same principle to build a quantum chip that stores information by replacing the string with microscopic acoustic resonators.

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