Quantum bus


A quantum bus is a device which can be used to store or transfer information between independent qubits in a quantum computer, or combine two qubits into a superposition. It is the quantum analog of a classical bus.

History

The concept was first demonstrated by researchers at Yale University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology in 2007. Prior to this experimental demonstration, the quantum bus had been described by scientists at NIST as one of the possible cornerstone building blocks in quantum computing architectures.

Mathematical Description

A quantum bus for superconducting qubits can be built with a resonance cavity. The hamiltonian for a system with qubit A, qubit B, and the resonance cavity or quantum bus connecting the two is where is the single qubit hamiltonian, is the raising or lowering operator for creating or destroying excitations in the th qubit, and is controlled by the amplitude of the D.C. and radio frequency flux bias.