https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/03/chance-discovery-brings-quantum-computing-using-standard-microchips-step-closer

Jim Bell's comment:
My isotope-modified integrated circuit material invention 
https://daltonium.com/     uses a very similar principle, putting 
spin-containing atomic nuclei into an electric field.  The main difference is, 
my invention does not act on individual atoms, but fields of atoms in a layer.  
Also, Intel was just granted a patent for an isotopically-purified way to build 
a material relatively free of nuclear spin.
http://www.freepatentsonline.com/10388848.html

So, effectively, in patent terms, I will own the right hand of a duplex, while 
Intel will own the left hand of a duplex.

           Jim Bell

[quote]
Chance discovery brings quantum computing using standard microchips a step 
closer

By Adrian ChoMar. 11, 2020 , 12:35 PM

An accidental innovation has given a dark-horse approach to quantum computing a 
boost. For decades, scientists have dreamed of using atomic nuclei embedded in 
silicon—the familiar stuff of microchips—as quantum bits, or qubits, in a 
superpowerful quantum computer, manipulating them with magnetic fields. Now, 
researchers in Australia have stumbled across a way to control such a nucleus 
with more-manageable electric fields, raising the prospect of controlling the 
qubits in much the same way as transistors in an ordinary microchip.



“That’s incredibly important,” says Thaddeus Ladd, a research physicist at HRL 
Laboratories LLC., a private research company. “This could potentially change 
the game for nuclear qubits in silicon.”

An ordinary computer flips bits from 1 to 0 and back again. A quantum computer 
employs qubits that can be set to 0, 1, or, thanks to the bizarre rules of 
quantum mechanics, 0 and 1 at the same time. This enables a quantum computer to 
crunch a huge number of inputs simultaneously, which is one reason why a big 
one should able to solve certain types of complex problems that would swamp any 
conventional computer. Last year, researchers with Google claimed their small 
quantum computer performed an abstruse calculation that would have taken 
conventional supercomputers millennia.
Jim





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