I never imagined that an artist would update me about quantum-computing research.
Last year, steampunk artist Bruce Rosenbaum forwarded me a notification about a news article published in Science. The article reported on an experiment performed in physicist Yiwen Chu’s lab at ETH Zürich. The experimentalists had built a “mechanical qubit”: they’d stored a basic unit of quantum information in a mechanical device that vibrates like a drumhead. The article dubbed the device a “steampunk qubit.”
I was collaborating with Bruce on a quantum-steampunk sculpture, and he asked if we should incorporate the qubit into the design. Leave it for a later project, I advised. But why on God’s green Earth are you receiving email updates about quantum computing?
My news feed sends me everything that says “steampunk,” he explained. So keeping a bead on steampunk can keep one up to date on quantum science and technology—as I’ve been preaching for years.
Other ideas displaced Chu’s qubit in my mind until I visited the University of California, Berkeley this January. Visiting Berkeley in January, one can’t help noticing—perhaps with a trace of smugness—the discrepancy between the temperature there and the temperature at home. And how better to celebrate a temperature difference than by studying a quantum-thermodynamics-style throwback to the 1800s?

One sun-drenched afternoon, I learned that one of my hosts had designed another steampunk qubit: Alp Sipahigil, an assistant professor of electrical engineering. He’d worked at Caltech as a postdoc around the time I’d finished my PhD there. We’d scarcely interacted, but I’d begun learning about his experiments in atomic, molecular, and optical physics then. Alp had learned about my work through Quantum Frontiers, as I discovered this January. I had no idea that he’d “met” me through the blog until he revealed as much to Berkeley’s physics department, when introducing the colloquium I was about to present.
Alp and collaborators proposed that a qubit could work as follows. It consists largely of a cantilever, which resembles a pendulum that bobs back and forth. The cantilever, being quantum, can have only certain amounts of energy. When the pendulum has a particular amount of energy, we say that the pendulum is in a particular energy level.

One might hope to use two of the energy levels as a qubit: if the pendulum were in its lowest-energy level, the qubit would be in its 0 state; and the next-highest level would represent the 1 state. A bit—a basic unit of classical information—has 0 and 1 states. A qubit can be in a superposition of 0 and 1 states, and so the cantilever could be.
A flaw undermines this plan, though. Suppose we want to process the information stored in the cantilever—for example, to turn a 0 state into a 1 state. We’d inject quanta—little packets—of energy into the cantilever. Each quantum would contain an amount of energy equal to (the energy associated with the cantilever’s 1 state) – (the amount associated with the 0 state). This equality would ensure that the cantilever could accept the energy packets lobbed at it.
But the cantilever doesn’t have only two energy levels; it has loads. Worse, all the inter-level energy gaps equal each other. However much energy the cantilever consumes when hopping from level 0 to level 1, it consumes that much when hopping from level 1 to level 2. This pattern continues throughout the rest of the levels. So imagine starting the cantilever in its 0 level, then trying to boost the cantilever into its 1 level. We’d probably succeed; the cantilever would probably consume a quantum of energy. But nothing would stop the cantilever from gulping more quanta and rising to higher energy levels. The cantilever would cease to serve as a qubit.

We can avoid this problem, Alp’s team proposed, by placing an atomic-force microscope near the cantilever. An atomic force microscope maps out surfaces similarly to how a Braille user reads: by reaching out a hand and feeling. The microscope’s “hand” is a tip about ten nanometers across. So the microscope can feel surfaces far more fine-grained than a Braille user can. Bumps embossed on a page force a Braille user’s finger up and down. Similarly, the microscope’s tip bobs up and down due to forces exerted by the object being scanned.

Imagine placing a microscope tip such that the cantilever swings toward it and then away. The cantilever and tip will exert forces on each other, especially when the cantilever swings close. This force changes the cantilever’s energy levels. Alp’s team chose the tip’s location, the cantilever’s length, and other parameters carefully. Under the chosen conditions, boosting the cantilever from energy level 1 to level 2 costs more energy than boosting from 0 to 1.
So imagine, again, preparing the cantilever in its 0 state and injecting energy quanta. The cantilever will gobble a quantum, rising to level 1. The cantilever will then remain there, as desired: to rise to level 2, the cantilever would have to gobble a larger energy quantum, which we haven’t provided.1

Will Alp build the mechanical qubit proposed by him and his collaborators? Yes, he confided, if he acquires a student nutty enough to try the experiment. For when he does—after the student has struggled through the project like a dirigible through a hurricane, but ultimately triumphed, and a journal is preparing to publish their magnum opus, and they’re brainstorming about artwork to represent their experiment on the journal’s cover—I know just the aesthetic to do the project justice.
1Chu’s team altered their cantilever’s energy levels using a superconducting qubit, rather than an atomic force microscope.