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Dartmouth Physics Professor Working To Solve Mystery Key To Quantum Computing

CybherHades via Flickr CC
Credit CybherHades via Flickr CC

Some of the biggest technology companies in the world are on a chase for what some consider the holy grail of the information age: Quantum computing. And some of that research is going on right there in New Hampshire. But one big challenge is to get the quantum bits to dance how we want them to. 

Before getting too high-tech, let's go back to 1938. A brilliant physicist, an Italian named Ettore Majorana, withdraws all his money from a bank and boards a boat. Then, somewhere between Palermo and Naples, he vanishes without a trace.

"That's a million dollar question. I wish I would have an answer. Majorana disappeared, and a lot of theories, a lot of speculations have been made. What can I say? The answer hasn't been found." says fellow Italian Lorenza Viola, a Dartmouth College physics professor. She researches what's come to be known as the Majorana particle.

Dartmouth Professor Lorenza Viola is on the track of an exotic, subatomic particle, whose existence was first predicted 75 years ago.
Credit Courtesy pho
Dartmouth Professor Lorenza Viola is on the track of an exotic, subatomic particle, whose existence was first predicted 75 years ago.

  The year before his disappearance, Majorana published a paper theorizing a revolutionary concept: that there was something out there that could be both a particle and its own anti-particle at the same time. A quasi-particle floating around in the subatomic world.

Decades later, scientists have come to believe these properties would make it a good base for a quantum computer.

Today's digital computers are built around bits, all the 0s and 1s that run our machines. The problem is, so far, the qubits researchers have identified keep falling apart when put into action. Viola says the Majorana, because of its peculiar qualities, may hang together.

"The fact that once created, once identified, it would be harder to destroy them, and so they would be intrinsically more stable, more protected, and so potentially more useful in a qubit. I don't know if it makes sense, but, that's the idea."

At this point, the Majorana is still mostly theory. In 2012, a team of Dutch researchers came the closest to proving its existence. But if someday finally harnessed, researchers will face a second challenge: getting it to do the computer operations they want it to.

University of Pennsylvania physics professor Charles Kane says that will require a concept called braiding. TheMajoranaparticles get braided together into patterns to maximize their power.

"What I want you to imagine is a square dance party where the two-dimensional plane is the dance floor, and the particles are the dancers," he explains. "And the caller tells you to do a dos-e-do. That means you move around your partner. The way that a quantum computer accomplishes a computation is by making the quasi particles dance around each other."

Huge sets of data get tossed into thequbits, which dance and compute and then spit out the answers. Math problems that would stump the computers of today could be worked out in short order, including factoring numbers with hundreds of digits.

Professor Kane says right now, researchers are still at the early stages, working to tame the systems. "It is a very difficult problem. You have to understand your materials and you have to have control over them, and that's requiring real state of the art technology."

And that requires big money. Companies like IBM, Microsoft and Google are pouring tens of millions of dollars, if not more, into the field. Practical applications may be years off, but a working machine could advance encryption technology, or drug research, or any other area where big data holds answers.

"It is a risky venture, but if you can make a quantum computer, then you can do something that other computers can't do," Kane says.

That's got companies and academics like Dartmouth'sLorenzaViola still combing over the physicsEttoreMajoranafirst put forward 75 years ago before his mysterious disappearance.

"I think if he could see us, or somehow be here, he would be very pleased because certainly he has left a big legacy," says Viola.

And who knows? Maybe in another 75 years,Majoranawill be a household name.

Listen to the radio version of this story

Copyright 2014 New Hampshire Public Radio

Todd started as a news correspondent with NHPR in 2009. He spent nearly a decade in the non-profit world, working with international development agencies and anti-poverty groups. He holds a master’s degree in public administration from Columbia University.

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