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Using sound to remember quantum information 30 times longer

Using sound to remember quantum information
A scanning electron microscope image highlighting a single mechanical oscillator, "tuning fork," from the new work. The false-colored golden lines in the image indicate the location of electrodes that transfer electrical signals between the superconducting qubit and the mechanical oscillator. Credit: Omid Golami

While conventional computers store information in the form of bits, fundamental pieces of logic that take a value of either 0 or 1, quantum computers are based on qubits. These can have a state that is simultaneously both 0 and 1. This odd property, a quirk of quantum physics known as superposition, lies at the heart of quantum computing's promise to ultimately solve problems that are intractable for classical computers.

Many existing quantum computers are based on superconducting electronic systems in which electrons flow without resistance at extremely low temperatures. In these systems, the quantum mechanical nature of electrons flowing through carefully designed resonators creates superconducting qubits.

These qubits are excellent at quickly performing the logical operations needed for computing. However, storing information—in this case quantum states, mathematical descriptors of particular quantum systems—is not their strong suit. Quantum engineers have been seeking a way to boost the storage times of quantum states by constructing so-called "quantum memories" for superconducting qubits.

Now a team of Caltech scientists has used a hybrid approach for quantum memories, effectively translating electrical information into sound so that quantum states from superconducting qubits can survive in storage for a period up to 30 times longer than in other techniques.

The new work, led by Caltech graduate students Alkim Bozkurt and Omid Golami, supervised by Mohammad Mirhosseini, assistant professor of electrical engineering and applied physics, appears in a published in the journal Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics.

"Once you have a quantum state, you might not want to do anything with it immediately," Mirhosseini says. "You need to have a way to come back to it when you want to do a logical operation. For that, you need a quantum memory."

Previously, Mirhosseini's group showed that sound, specifically phonons, which are individual particles of vibration (in the way that photons are individual particles of light), could provide a convenient method for storing quantum information.

The devices they tested in classical experiments seemed ideal for pairing with superconducting qubits because they worked at the same extremely high gigahertz frequencies (humans hear at hertz and kilohertz frequencies that are at least a million times slower). They also performed well at the low temperatures needed to preserve quantum states with superconducting qubits and had long lifetimes.

Now Mirhosseini and his colleagues have fabricated a superconducting on a chip and connected it to a tiny device that scientists call a mechanical oscillator. Essentially a miniature tuning fork, the oscillator consists of flexible plates that are vibrated by at gigahertz frequencies. When an is placed on those plates, the plates can interact with electrical signals carrying quantum information. This allows information to be piped into the device for storage as a "memory" and be piped out, or "remembered," later.

The researchers carefully measured how long it took for the oscillator to lose its valuable quantum content once information entered the device. "It turns out that these oscillators have a lifetime about 30 times longer than the best out there," Mirhosseini says.

This method of constructing a quantum memory offers several advantages over previous strategies. Acoustic waves travel much slower than electromagnetic waves, enabling much more compact devices. Moreover, mechanical vibrations, unlike , do not propagate in , which means that energy does not leak out of the system.

This allows for extended storage times and mitigates undesirable energy exchange between nearby devices. These advantages point to the possibility that many such tuning forks could be included in a , providing a potentially scalable way of making quantum memories.

Mirhosseini says this work has demonstrated the minimum amount of interaction between electromagnetic and needed to probe the value of this hybrid system for use as a memory element.

"For this platform to be truly useful for quantum computing, you need to be able to put quantum data in the system and take it out much faster. And that means that we have to find ways of increasing the interaction rate by a factor of three to 10 beyond what our current system is capable of," Mirhosseini says. Luckily, his group has ideas about how that can be done.

More information: Bozkurt, A.B. et al, A mechanical quantum memory for microwave photons, Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics (2025). .

Journal information: Nature Âé¶¹ÒùÔºics

Citation: Using sound to remember quantum information 30 times longer (2025, August 13) retrieved 13 August 2025 from /news/2025-08-quantum-longer.html
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