Physicists Create a Working Transistor From a Single Atom
By JOHN MARKOFF
Published: February 19, 2012
Australian and American physicists have built a working transistor from a single phosphorus atom embedded in a silicon crystal.
The group of physicists, based at the University of New South Wales and Purdue University, said they had laid the groundwork for a futuristic quantum computer that might one day function in a nanoscale world and would be orders of magnitude smaller and quicker than todays silicon-based machines.
In contrast to conventional computers that are based on transistors with distinct on and off or 1 and 0 states, quantum computers are built from devices called qubits that exploit the quirky properties of quantum mechanics. Unlike a transistor, a qubit can represent a multiplicity of values simultaneously.
That might make it possible to factor large numbers more quickly than with conventional machines thereby undermining modern data-scrambling systems that are the basis of electronic commerce and data privacy. Quantum computers might also make it possible to simulate molecular structures with great speed, an advance that holds promise for designing new drugs and other kinds of materials.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/20/science/physicists-create-a-working-transistor-from-a-single-atom.html