homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Physicists save Schrödinger's cat and bring us closer to quantum computers

The quantum jump that kills Schroedinger's cat isn't as sudden or random as previously believed. There is hope for our kitty yet!

Tibi Puiu
June 4, 2019 @ 6:33 pm

share Share

Managing quantum data and correcting errors are the biggest challenges that scientists face in the development of fully practical quantum computers. A new study performed by researchers at Yale University might offer the means to overcome this predicament — while also saving Schrödinger’s famous cat.

Credit: RMS.

In 1935, in an attempt to mock the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, Erwin Schrödinger proposed a thought experiment: a cat is placed in a sealed box along with a radioactive sample, a Geiger counter and a bottle of poison.

If the Geiger counter detects that the radioactive material has decayed, it will trigger the smashing of the bottle of poison, killing the cat. Effectively, the cat’s life depends on the quantum mechanics determined state of a radioactively decaying atom.

The ‘Copenhagen interpretation’ of quantum mechanics states that a particle exists in all states at once until observed — something which physicists call “superposition”. Conversely, the radioactive material can have simultaneously decayed and not decayed in the sealed environment. It follows that Schrödinger’s cat is both alive and dead until one opens the box. Of course, everyone thought this was absurd, but it’s precisely this absurdity that Schrödinger was trying to convey. However, we now know from experiments that superposition is actually real in quantum mechanics, no matter how weird it may sound.

So, the radioactive atom and kitty are intimately “entangled” with each other. But once an observer opens the box, the “superposition” of the cat—the idea that it was in both states—would collapse into either the knowledge that “the cat is alive” or “the cat is dead,” but not both. This abrupt change in the atom’s quantum state is supposedly random and called a “quantum jump.” The notion of a quantum jump was first described by Danish physicist Niels Bohr but it wasn’t until the 1980s that it was observed in atoms for the first time.

“These jumps occur every time we measure a qubit,” said Michel Devoret, Professor of Applied Physics and Physics at Yale and member of the Yale Quantum Institute. “Quantum jumps are known to be unpredictable in the long run.”

The nature of this superposition collapse is very annoying and troublesome for practical applications of quantum technology. Devoret and colleagues wanted to see whether it was possible to get an advanced warning signal that a jump was about to occur.

For their experiment, the researchers indirectly monitored a superconducting atom or qubit (the basic unit of information in a quantum computer) which was blasted by three microwave sources inside a 3-D cavity made of aluminum. Some of the microwave radiation switched the qubit between energy states, while another beam of radiation measured the cavity. In the qubit’s ground state, the microwave beam exposure releases photons. So a sudden absence of photons means that the qubit is about to make a quantum jump into an excited state.

“The beautiful effect displayed by this experiment is the increase of coherence during the jump, despite its observation,” said Devoret.

“You can leverage this to not only catch the jump, but also reverse it,” lead author Zlatko Minev added in a statement.

The experiment’s findings contradict Bohr showing that quantum jumps are neither abrupt nor as random as previously believed. Instead, a quantum jump always occurs in the same, predictable manner from its random starting point. This deterministic nature means that it can also be reversed with another pulse of microwave radiation, sending the qubit back into a ground state. In other words, saving Schrödinger’s cat.

“Quantum jumps of an atom are somewhat analogous to the eruption of a volcano,” Minev said. “They are completely unpredictable in the long term. Nonetheless, with the correct monitoring we can with certainty detect an advance warning of an imminent disaster and act on it before it has occurred.

The new study, published in the journal Nature, will prove useful in the development of quantum computers where qubits jump all the time, causing computing errors. Where traditional computers perform their calculations in binary – using 1s and 0s – quantum computers exploit the odd characteristics of the quantum state of particles at the atomic scale. Like Schrödinger’s cat, the value of a qubit isn’t definitely 1 or 0, but both at the same time. A quantum computer is theoretically thousands of times faster than a traditional computer.

share Share

1% of People Never Have Sex and Genetics Might Explain Why

A study of more than 400,000 people found 1% had never had sex – which was linked to a range of genetic, environmental and other factors.

Researchers Say Humans Are In the Midst of an Evolutionary Shift Like Never Before

Humans are evolving faster through culture than through biology.

Archaeologists Found A Rare 30,000-Year-Old Toolkit That Once Belonged To A Stone Age Hunter

An ancient pouch of stone tools brings us face-to-face with one Gravettian hunter.

Scientists Crack the Secret Behind Jackson Pollock’s Vivid Blue in His Most Famous Drip Painting

Chemistry reveals the true origins of a color that electrified modern art.

China Now Uses 80% Artificial Sand. Here's Why That's A Bigger Deal Than It Sounds

No need to disturb water bodies for sand. We can manufacture it using rocks or mining waste — China is already doing it.

Over 2,250 Environmental Defenders Have Been Killed or Disappeared in the Last 12 Years

The latest tally from Global Witness is a grim ledger. In 2024, at least 146 people were killed or disappeared while defending land, water and forests. That brings the total to at least 2,253 deaths and disappearances since 2012, a steady toll that turns local acts of stewardship into mortal hazards. The organization’s report reads less like […]

After Charlie Kirk’s Murder, Americans Are Asking If Civil Discourse Is Even Possible Anymore

Trying to change someone’s mind can seem futile. But there are approaches to political discourse that still matter, even if they don’t instantly win someone over.

Climate Change May Have Killed More Than 16,000 People in Europe This Summer

Researchers warn that preventable heat-related deaths will continue to rise with continued fossil fuel emissions.

New research shows how Trump uses "strategic victimhood" to justify his politics

How victimhood rhetoric helped Donald Trump justify a sweeping global trade war

Biggest Modern Excavation in Tower of London Unearths the Stories of the Forgotten Inhabitants

As the dig deeper under the Tower of London they are unearthing as much history as stone.