PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Device enables direct communication among multiple quantum processors

MIT researchers developed a photon-shuttling “interconnect” that can facilitate remote entanglement, a key step toward a practical quantum computer.

2025-03-21
(Press-News.org)

Quantum computers have the potential to solve complex problems that would be impossible for the most powerful classical supercomputer to crack. 

Just like a classical computer has separate, yet interconnected, components that must work together, such as a memory chip and a CPU on a motherboard, a quantum computer will need to communicate quantum information between multiple processors.

Current architectures used to interconnect superconducting quantum processors are “point-to-point” in connectivity, meaning they require a series of transfers between network nodes, with compounding error rates. 

On the way to overcoming these challenges, MIT researchers developed a new interconnect device that can support scalable, “all-to-all” communication, such that all superconducting quantum processors in a network can communication directly with each other.

They created a network of two quantum processors and used their interconnect to send microwave photons back and forth on demand in a user-defined direction. Photons are particles of light that can carry quantum information.

The device includes a superconducting wire, or waveguide, that shuttles photons between processors and can be routed as far as needed. The researchers can couple any number of modules to it, efficiently transmitting information between a scalable network of processors.

They used this interconnect to demonstrate remote entanglement, a type of correlation between quantum processors that are not physically connected. Remote entanglement is a key step toward developing a powerful, distributed network of many quantum processors.

“In the future, a quantum computer will probably need both local and nonlocal interconnects. Local interconnects are natural in arrays of superconducting qubits. Ours allows for more nonlocal connections. We can send photons at different frequencies, times, and in two propagation directions, which gives our network more flexibility and throughput,” says Aziza Almanakly, an electrical engineering and computer science graduate student in the Engineering Quantum Systems group of the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE) and lead author of a paper on the interconnect.

Her co-authors include Beatriz Yankelevich, a graduate student in the EQuS Group; senior author William D. Oliver, an MIT professor of electrical engineering and computer science and of physics, an MIT Lincoln Laboratory Fellow, director of the Center for Quantum Engineering, and associate director of RLE; and others at MIT and Lincoln Laboratory. The research will appear in Nature Physics.

A scalable architecture

The researchers previously developed a quantum computing module, which enabled them to send information-carrying microwave photons in either direction along a waveguide.

In the new work, they took that architecture a step further by connecting two modules to a waveguide in order to emit photons in a desired direction and then absorb them at the other end. 

Each module is composed of four qubits, which serve as an interface between the waveguide carrying the photons and the larger quantum processors. 

The qubits in the module emit and absorb photons to the waveguide, and then hand off that information to nearby data qubits that store the result of the communication. 

The researchers use a series of microwave pulses to add energy to a qubit, which then emits a photon. Carefully controlling the phase of those pulses enables a quantum interference effect that allows them to emit the photon in either direction along the waveguide. Reversing the pulses in time enables a qubit in another module any arbitrary distance away to absorb the photon.

“Pitching and catching photons enables us to create a ‘quantum interconnect’ between nonlocal quantum processors, and with quantum interconnects comes remote entanglement,” explains Oliver.

“Generating remote entanglement is a crucial step toward building a large-scale quantum processor from smaller-scale modules. Even after that photon is gone, we have a correlation between two distant, or ‘nonlocal,’ qubits. Remote entanglement allows us to take advantage of these correlations and perform parallel operations between two qubits, even though they are no longer connected and may be far apart,” Yankelevich explains.

However, transferring a photon between two modules is not enough to generate remote entanglement. The researchers need to prepare the qubits and the photon so the modules “share” the photon at the end of the protocol.

Generating entanglement

The team did this by halting the photon emission pulses halfway through their duration. In quantum mechanical terms, the photon is both retained and emitted. Classically, one can think that half-a-photon is retained and half is emitted. 

Once the receiver module absorbs that “half-photon,” the two modules become entangled.

But as the photon travels, joints, wire bonds, and connections in the waveguide distort the photon and limit the absorption efficiency of the receiving module.

To generate remote entanglement with high enough fidelity, or accuracy, the researchers needed to maximize how often the photon is absorbed at the other end.

“The challenge in this work was shaping the photon appropriately so we could maximize the absorption efficiency,” Almanakly says.

They used a reinforcement learning algorithm to learn how the propagating photon would be distorted in advance. Then, they “predistorted” the photon, so it was shaped in the best way possible to maximize emission and absorption as it was transmitted between modules.

When they implemented this optimized absorption protocol, they were able to show photon absorption efficiency greater than 60 percent. 

This absorption efficiency is high enough to prove that the resulting state at the end of the protocol is entangled, a major milestone in this demonstration. 

“We can use this architecture to create a network with all-to-all connectivity. This means we can have multiple modules, all along the same bus, and we can create remote entanglement among any pair of our choosing,” Yankelevich says.

In the future, they could improve the absorption efficiency by optimizing the path over which the photons propagate, perhaps by integrating modules in 3D instead of having a superconducting wire connecting separate microwave packages. They could also make the protocol faster so there are fewer chances for errors to accumulate.

“In principle, our remote entanglement generation protocol can also be expanded to other kinds of quantum computers and bigger quantum internet systems,” Almanakly says.

This work was funded, in part, by the U.S. Army Research Office, the AWS Center for Quantum Computing, and the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research. 

###

Written by Adam Zewe, MIT News

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Nanotech-induced cooling improves crop yields in arid climates

2025-03-21
Scientists at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) have developed and combined a new nanoplastic and biodegradable mulch to passively cool greenhouses in hot, arid climates like those in the Middle East. Applying their technology, they lowered temperatures of miniature greenhouses by 25 degrees Celsius and increased crop yields of Chinese cabbage by nearly 200%. The study can be read in Nexus.   The nanoplastic consists of polyethylene, the most widely produced plastic in the world, infused with nanoparticles consisting of the molecule cesium tungsten oxide. These nanoparticles absorb ...

Home sweet home: some great hammerhead sharks stick to the perfect neighborhood in the Bahamas instead of migrating

Home sweet home: some great hammerhead sharks stick to the perfect neighborhood in the Bahamas instead of migrating
2025-03-21
New research shows that some great hammerhead sharks are homebodies. Scientists studying great hammerheads around Andros in the Bahamas shark sanctuary have found that while some individuals migrate, others prefer to stay at home — potentially because their environment provides them with everything they need. This information could help protect the critically endangered species.  “The global population of great hammerheads is thought to have reduced by more than 80% over the last three generations, and genomic ...

Bubbly idea: Ultrafine bubble showers suppress atopic dermatitis

Bubbly idea: Ultrafine bubble showers suppress atopic dermatitis
2025-03-21
Bubble baths might be soothing soaks, but bubble showers could be the next thing in keeping the skin clean. An Osaka Metropolitan University-led medical research team found that ultrafine bubble showers might help prevent atopic dermatitis. Graduate School of Medicine student Ayaki Matsumoto and Associate Professor Hisayoshi Imanishi led the study into using ultrafine bubbles, often used to clean medical equipment, on mice with atopic dermatitis. The scientists found that in mice with atopic dermatitis due to external factors, inflammation was markedly suppressed when the affected skin ...

Aotearoa once home to elephant seals

2025-03-21
Southern elephant seals are the “canary in the coal mine” for the Southern Ocean, offering insight into how the ecosystem may react to future climate change and human impact, new research shows. Joint senior author Associate Professor Nic Rawlence, Director of the Otago Palaeogenetics Laboratory, says while elephant seals now only inhabit the subantarctic islands and South America, Aotearoa beaches used to be “heaving” with the colossal animals. “At the time of human arrival in New Zealand, you would be hard pressed to find room on the beaches, with fur seals on the rocky headlands, prehistoric sealions and elephant seals ...

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production
2025-03-21
Great recipes require the perfect combination of ingredients — biotechnology recipes are no exception. Researchers from Osaka Metropolitan University have discovered the ideal genetic “recipe” to turn yeast into a tiny yet powerful eco-friendly factory that converts methanol into D-lactic acid, a key compound used in biodegradable plastics and pharmaceuticals. This approach could help reduce reliance on petroleum-based processes and contribute to more sustainable chemical production. Lactic acid is widely used in food, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and bioplastics. It exists in two forms: L-lactic acid ...

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2
2025-03-21
Ikoma, Japan—The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the urgent need for effective therapeutic agents against SARS-CoV-2. Although vaccines helped control the spread of the virus, the emergence of new variants continues to challenge global health efforts. Small-molecule inhibitors targeting viral proteins could serve as an effective alternative for controlling the spread of COVID-19 at both individual and community levels. In this vein, a recent study led by Associate Professor Md. Altaf-Ul-Amin, along with Muhammad Alqaaf, Ahmad Kamal Nasution, Mohammad Bozlul Karim, Mahfujul Islam ...

Almost half of children with complicated appendicitis can recover from surgery at home

2025-03-21
Almost half of children who require surgery for complicated appendicitis can safely complete their recovery at home, according to a new study. The research, led by Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) and published in the Journal of Pediatric Surgery, found more than 40 per cent who received care in the home following a complex appendectomy recovered faster and had fewer complications. More than 300 patients present with appendicitis to The Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) every year, with about one in three ...

Sensory t-shirt collects patient data and enables shorter postoperative hospital stay

2025-03-21
A t-shirt that monitors a patient’s vitals after urological surgery for cancer could help people return from hospital sooner to recover at home. The device, worn for around two weeks under clothes for three-hour windows each day, enabled patients to feel safer and more reassured than a control group in a pilot study of 70 individuals. The results are presented this weekend at the European Association of Urology (EAU) Congress in Madrid.   Telemedicine in medical practice allows patients and clinicians to maintain contact remotely so that care, interventions and monitoring ...

Worse outcomes for men who avoid prostate cancer screening

2025-03-21
Men who consistently avoid prostate cancer screening appointments face a disproportionately higher risk of dying from the disease, finds research identifying a new high-risk group. An analysis of data from across seven countries from the world’s largest prostate cancer screening study, the European Randomized study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC), is presented this weekend at the European Association of Urology (EAU) Congress in Madrid. Prostate cancer is the most common form of cancer in men in 112 countries, with prevalence expected to double by 2040. If introduced on a national scale, prostate ...

Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warne

2025-03-21
Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warned Shrinking glaciers in the Andes threaten the water supplies of 90 million people Andean glaciers are thinning by 0.7 metres a year, 35 percent faster than the global average Climate change is threatening the stability of the Andean glaciers as a water source and the water security of the people who rely on them Scientists argue we are not doing enough to curb the carbon emissions fueling climate change Scientists from the University of Sheffield will warn policymakers that the shrinking glaciers of the Andes threaten ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Unlocking dopamine’s hidden role: Protective modification of Tau revealed

New drug therapy combination shows promise for advanced melanoma patients

Nature’s warriors: How rice plants detect and defend against viral invaders

How the brain responds to prices: Scientists discover neural marker for price perception

Boosting brain’s waste removal system improves memory in old mice

New study sheds light on risks from residential heat and energy burdens in Miami

Racial and ethnic inequalities in actual vs nearest delivery hospitals

State earned income tax credits and firearm suicides

VR study reveals how pain and fear weaken sense of body ownership

Quantum leap: Graphene unlocks orbital hybridization

How black holes could nurture life

Dr. Amit Bar-Or, penn medicine neuroimmunologist, awarded the 2025 John Dystel prize for multiple sclerosis research

Recent study in mice provides key insights on the impact of excessive sucrose consumption in specific organs

A less toxic way to manufacture daily goods

Nearly half of depression diagnoses could be considered treatment-resistant

Deadly bacteria developed the ability to produce antimicrobials and wiped-out competitors

Device enables direct communication among multiple quantum processors

Nanotech-induced cooling improves crop yields in arid climates

Home sweet home: some great hammerhead sharks stick to the perfect neighborhood in the Bahamas instead of migrating

Bubbly idea: Ultrafine bubble showers suppress atopic dermatitis

Aotearoa once home to elephant seals

Green recipe: Engineered yeast boosts D-lactic acid production

Computational drug discovery: Exploring natural products targeting SARS-CoV-2

Almost half of children with complicated appendicitis can recover from surgery at home

Sensory t-shirt collects patient data and enables shorter postoperative hospital stay

Worse outcomes for men who avoid prostate cancer screening

Shrinking Andean glaciers threaten water supply of 90 million people, global policy makers warne

Women’s earnings fall 10% four years after menopause diagnosis

Researchers capture first laser-driven, high-resolution CT scans of dense objects 

Cambridge team uses powerful new MRI scans to enable life-changing surgery in first for adults with epilepsy

[Press-News.org] Device enables direct communication among multiple quantum processors
MIT researchers developed a photon-shuttling “interconnect” that can facilitate remote entanglement, a key step toward a practical quantum computer.