Caltech's Quantum Memory Breakthrough: Extending Qubit Lifetimes 30-Fold with Sound Waves
August 14, 2025
The study also demonstrates that mechanical oscillators can serve as effective quantum memories for superconducting devices, with potential applications in quantum computing, sensing, and transduction.
The method involves converting electrical signals from superconducting qubits into mechanical vibrations, or phonons, using a piezoelectric material, thereby helping to maintain the integrity of quantum states.
The team linked superconducting qubits to tiny mechanical oscillators vibrating at gigahertz frequencies, enabling the storage and retrieval of quantum information as sound waves.
Superconducting qubits, which are highly effective for processing quantum information, have traditionally suffered from short coherence times, but this new technique aims to overcome that limitation.
The approach benefits from the slow travel of acoustic waves, allowing for compact device design, and because vibrations do not radiate into free space, energy loss and interference are minimized.
Researchers at Caltech, led by graduate students Alkim Bozkurt and Omid Golami under Professor Mohammad Mirhosseini, have developed a groundbreaking hybrid quantum memory that significantly extends the storage duration of superconducting qubits, achieving times up to 30 times longer than previous methods.
This innovative quantum memory stores information from superconducting qubits as sound waves, leveraging acoustic vibrations to preserve quantum states more effectively.
Extending qubit coherence times is crucial for advancing complex quantum computations, and this sound-based approach offers a promising solution to that challenge.
The technique exploits the reduced environmental interaction of acoustic waves, which minimizes decoherence and enhances the stability of quantum information storage.
Published in Nature Physics, this research addresses a key limitation in quantum computing by improving quantum memory duration, paving the way for more robust and scalable quantum systems.
The prototype has achieved quantum state lifetimes up to 30 times longer than existing qubits, with ongoing efforts focused on improving data transfer speeds for practical quantum computing applications.
The team uses a chip-based mechanical oscillator, similar to a microscopic tuning fork, to convert quantum electrical signals into acoustic vibrations, which lose energy more slowly and reduce interference.
While current interaction rates need to be increased three- to tenfold for practical use, the researchers have strategies in place to achieve this, moving closer to scalable quantum memory solutions.
Summary based on 2 sources
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Interesting Engineering • Aug 14, 2025
‘Tuning fork’: US lab uses sound to store quantum data 30 times longer than qubits
Quantum Zeitgeist • Aug 14, 2025
Caltech Boosts Quantum Storage With Sound-Based Memory