
Prof. Johannes Knolle with his research colleague Prof. Hongzheng Zhao, who now works in China.
Photo Credit: Robert Reich / TUM
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Targeted Shaking Stabilizes Exotic Quantum States
The Core Concept: Researchers have developed a method using engineered, randomized multipolar driving—or "targeted shaking"—to drastically slow down unwanted heating in superconducting quantum processors, enabling the stabilization and observation of exotic quantum states.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: While conventional periodic "shaking" used to generate exotic quantum states typically causes the system to absorb energy, heat up, and rapidly lose its structure, this new approach relies on carefully designed patterns of random pulses. Because these randomized pulses partially cancel each other out over time, the system maintains its structural integrity, allowing researchers to track its evolution over more than a thousand driving cycles—a feat beyond the simulation capabilities of modern classical computers.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Random Multipolar Driving: The application of mathematically designed random energy pulses (spectral engineering) that mitigate the thermal degradation of the system.
- 78-Qubit Processor: Experimental validation utilized the state-of-the-art "Chuang-tzu 2.0" superconducting quantum chip containing 78 quantum particles (qubits).
- Quantum Entanglement Tracking: Direct measurement of entanglement across the processor to monitor stability over an unprecedented 1,000+ driving cycles.









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