by gampy » Fri 09 Feb 2007, 12:49:35
Cool...here is a blurb describing how it works.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he aggressiveness of D-Wave's timetable is made possible by the simplicity of its device's design: an analog chip made of low-temperature superconductors. The chip must be cooled to -269 °C with liquid helium, but it doesn't require the delicate state-of-the-art lasers, vacuum pumps, and other exotic machinery that other quantum computers need.
The design is also amenable to the lithography techniques used to make standard computer chips, further simplifying fabrication. D-Wave patterns an array of loops of low-temperature superconductors such as aluminum and niobium onto a chip. When electricity flows through them, the loops act like tiny magnets. Two refrigerator magnets will naturally flip so that they stick together, minimizing the energy between them. The loops in D-Wave's chip behave similarly, "flipping" the direction of current flow from clockwise to counterclockwise to minimize the magnetic flux between them. Depending on the problem it's meant to tackle, the chip is programmed so that current flows through each loop in a particular direction. The loops then spontaneously flip until they reach a stable energy state, which represents the solution to the problem.
Full article here:
http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/14591/
Lol. Don't think you will be playing
Half-Life 5 anytime soon, though.
Kind of a clever mechanism they have devised. Instead of entanglement. they are exploiting tunneling.
EDIT: I imagine that CERN would love to have access to computing resources like this. But I think that the applications are limited to certain problems, vis-a-vis the "traveling salesman" type problems.