MENU

An Acoustic Quantum Computer? – Listen here!

An Acoustic Quantum Computer? – Listen here!

News |
By Wisse Hettinga

Cette publication existe aussi en Français


To get around the constraints of quantum physics, EPFL researchers have built a new acoustic system to study the way the minuscule atoms of condensed matter talk together. They hope to one day build an acoustic version of a quantum computer

An EPFL report:

What happens when a quantum physicist is frustrated by the limitations of quantum mechanics when trying to study densely packed atoms? At EPFL, you get a metamaterial, an engineered material that exhibits exotic properties.

That frustrated physicist is PhD student Mathieu Padlewski. In collaboration with Hervé Lissek and Romain Fleury at EPFL’s Laboratory of Wave Engineering, Padlewski has built a novel acoustic system for exploring condensed matter and their macroscopic properties, all the while circumventing the extremely sensitive nature that is inherent to quantum phenomena. Moreover, the acoustic system can be tweaked to study properties that go beyond solid-state physics. The results are published in Physical Review B.

“We’ve essentially built a playground inspired by quantum mechanics that can be adjusted to study various systems. Our metamaterial consists of highly tunable active elements, allowing us to synthesize phenomena that extend beyond the realm of nature,” says Padlewski. “Potential applications include manipulating waves and guiding energy for telecommunications, and the setup may one day provide clues for harvesting energy from waves for instance.”

If we take the sound of one’s voice for instance, we know that the reason why someone’s voice is unique and rich is because we hear the whole spectrum of frequencies. The frequency spectrum is characteristic for a given voice, but it also explains why the piano has its unique timbre, or why the trumpet sounds differently from the trombone. In principle, we can simultaneously hear the fundamental frequency, aka the fundamental state, plus all of the higher frequencies known as the harmonics. Borrowing language from quantum physics, we are actually hearing a superposition of many states at once.

Or by analogy with Schrödinger’s cat, the cat is both dead and alive, and we can hear it!

“Quantum probability waves are waves after all – why not model them with sound?” says Padlewski. “Probing the electronic states of a solid state, directly without perturbation, would be like having a blind person tread through a busy street without a cane. But in acoustics, we can probe waves directly, in phase and in amplitude without destroying the state – which is nice.”

The acoustic metamaterial built at EPFL consists of a line of “acoustic atoms”, essentially 16 small cubes connected to one another with openings to allow for the placement of multiple speakers or microphones. Speakers generate sound waves that are to propagate through the line of acoustic atoms in a controlled way, microphones measure sound waves for feedback control. The cubes can be viewed as building blocks for building more complex systems that go beyond a simple line.

“When you see the cochlea, the ear’s organ responsible for hearing, it resembles our active acoustic metamaterial in its structure and functionality,” says Lissek. “The cochlea consists of a perfect line of cells that amplify different frequencies. Our metamaterial could potentially be tuned to function the same way and study hearing problems like tinnitus.”

More

If you enjoyed this article, you will like the following ones: don't miss them by subscribing to :    eeNews on Google News

Share:

Linked Articles
10s