An in-depth look at the engineering inside a quantum computer, and also demonstrating the operational results live and how they are measured. With Professor Andrea Morello who is the Scientia Professor of quantum engineering in the School of Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications at the University of New South Wales, and a Program Manager at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology. Previous in-depth discussion on how quantum computers work: 00:00 - Inside the UNSW Quantum Computer lab & Quantum computer courses 03:42 - Inside a 2 cubit research quantum computer using a single phosphorus atom 04:04 - A working 3 cubit antimony atom quantum computer 04:42 - The quantum computer chip and shielding 05:33 - How the whole system works 07:40 - ❄️ How to measure 4deg kelvin 13:23 - 🔬 The design and purpose of a filter box used in low temperature experiments to filter out high frequency signals. 20:11 - 🔬 Research and new science are being done with prototype chips that can stay in a fridge for up to four years. 27:14 - 💡 The video explains how a transistor works and how the movement of electrons can cause a shift in the pattern. 33:36 - Silicon is a practical choice for quantum computing due to its semiconductor properties and isotopic purity. 40:39 - 💡 Magnet quench is when a superconducting wire goes from being a superconductor to a normal resistor, causing a significant amount of power dissipation. 47:41 - 🔬 How a refrigerator is used to cool down the electron electrochemical potential in order to populate the spin down level for magnetic resonance. 54:30 - 🧪 Designing a cancer cure on a classical computer is computationally complex due to the quantum nature of the problem. 1:01:14 - 🔬 A startup has developed a commercial machine for Quantum control that allows users to manipulate and operate a large multi-dimensional Quantum system. 1:07:29 - 🔬 Advantages of using silicon MOSFET over other materials for spin-based operations. 1:14:09 - 🧲 The magnetic field created by the solenoid is more stable than the magnetic field of the superconducting magnet, with a very slow decay rate. 1:18:40 - 1.5 Kelvin Liquid helium cooling chamber 1:19:44 - 0.3 Kelvin Helium 3 tester 1:22:45 - Pumping room 07:34 - A look at the Australian National Fabrication Facility If you find my videos useful you may consider supporting the EEVblog on Patreon: Or with crypto: BTC: 33BsprBQNBtHuVzVwDmqWkpDjYnCouwASM ETH: 0x68114e40ff4dcdd384750500501e20acf3875f8c BCH: 35n9KBPw9T7M3NGzpS3t4nUYEf9HbRmkm4 USDC: 0x68114e40ff4dcdd384750500501e20acf3875f8c LTC: MJfK57ujxy55su4XicVGQc9wcEJf6mAoXF Web Site: Store: Other channels: EEVblog2: EEVdiscover: T-Shirts: #ElectronicsCreators #Quantum #quantumcomputer Теги: eevblog,video,andrea morello,quantum computer,quantum computing,quantum physics,university of new south wales,andrea morello quantum computing,unsw sydney,unsw australia,professor andrea morello,quantum computing explained
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