| Jun 03, 2026 |
Engineers have riffed on the famous Schr�dinger�s cat analogy to demonstrate a more efficient way to eliminate errors in quantum computing.
(Nanowerk News) âImagine youâre trying to find your cat hiding in one of eight identical cardboard boxes, in a dark and noisy room,â says UNSW Scientia Professor Andrea Morello.
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âYou are not allowed to enter the room â opening the door may kill the cat. What is the optimal strategy to find out where itâs hiding? Our team of quantum researchers have found an answer to this problem, and it might be an important milestone on the road to building a quantum computer.â
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The cat metaphor has been used for decades to illustrate the quirky phenomena that occur when attempting to apply quantum mechanics to macroscopic systems.
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In a UNSW-led study (PRX Quantum, “Maximizing the Nondemolition Nature of a Quantum Measurement Via an Adaptive Readout Protocol”) the âcatâ is the nucleus of an atom of antimony, implanted in a silicon quantum chip. Although atomically small, the antimony nucleus has eight quantum states that can be used to encode quantum information.
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Having eight different states leaves extra room to detect and correct errors that may occur during the calculation.
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Improving quantum error correction is a major hurdle in building large-scale quantum computers.
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âThe quantum states used to encode the information are called, indeed, âSchrödinger catâ states,â says Prof. Morello.
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âThe key remaining problem is finding out an error has occurred, without disrupting the precious information encoded in the atom â or âcatâ.â
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Just add âwaterâ
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To explain how this problem was solved, Prof. Morello says to imagine the cat in the dark room.
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âIn this scenario, you cannot enter the room and look inside, so instead you could place eight sprinklers in the room, each placed above one of the boxes. You then spray some water over each box, in sequence, and listen for an angry âmeowâ when the cat expresses displeasure for being sprayed.
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âBut because the room is noisy, you might mistakenly think that a meow came from an empty box â or miss registering a true meow coming from the box containing the cat.â
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He says the standard method to reduce the chance of such mistakes is to repeat the whole experiment several times, and infer the cat is in the box where the most meows came from.
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However, spray too often and the cat might panic and jump to another box.
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âRepeatedly sprinkling the boxes risks changing the very thing you are trying to observe,â Prof. Morello says.
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The trick, says Prof. Morello, is to stop immediately once the first âmeowâ is observed â this is your initial guess â and switch to sprinkling only the boxes where the cat supposedly isnât.
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âSilence from those boxes increases the confidence that your guess was correct,â he says.
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âThe absence of a signal confirms the presence of another, without interacting directly with the system.
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âSometimes, silence can be loud.â
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Back to the science
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In the physical system used by the researchers, the âsprinklerâ is an electron that can be pushed onto the atom and then removed from it conditionally on the quantum state of the nuclear spin.
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The addition and removal of the electron can unsettle the nucleus and make it jump to a different state.
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When the new strategy is applied to the âatomic catâ, the electron only needs to come off the atom once. After that, only the empty states are probed.
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This method more than halved the chance of error, and it cut the total measurement time to a third.
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Lead author Arjen Vaartjes says using this adaptive measurement strategy, the team managed to boost the confidence of âfinding the cat in the right boxâ to 99.61%.
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âThis value is significant because it puts our system in the range of measurement fidelities necessary to perform successful quantum error correction.â
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Prof. Morello says, âquantum error correction relies on repeated measurements without disrupting the fragile quantum information, equivalent to finding the cat in the right box without scaring it.â
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By changing their measurement strategy, the team showed it is possible to extract more information while causing less disturbance â an essential step toward utility-scale quantum computing.
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The team says the approach could improve âmid-circuitâ measurements used in quantum error correction, which is a major challenge in developing scalable quantum computers for applications such as drug discovery, simulation of chemical reactions, optimisation of financial portfolios and machine learning.
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A trick any quantum lab can use
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Prof. Morello says the broader impact of the work is that it can be applied to a wide range of other quantum computing systems.
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âThis adaptive measurement approach may help significantly reduce measurement errors in systems ranging from semiconductor qubits to atomic or photonic architectures,â he says.
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âBecause many architectures also employ similar hardware, the new protocol can readily be adapted to other platforms that suffer from errors during measurement.â
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He says scalable quantum computing may ultimately depend on how well we learn to âfind the cat in the right boxâ without disturbing it.
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âWe can now extract information about the quantum system just gently enough to keep it intact.â
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Vaartjes says âall it took was a fast FPGA, a cup of coffee, a dedicated team of clever researchers and a long Friday afternoon of codingâ.
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