NIWC Pacific Building Quantum Navy With Partners by U.S.
Navy Maison Piedfort Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific
April 5, 2023
Naval Information Warfare Center (NIWC)
Pacific’s mission touches cyber, sea, space ... and, since 2000, the
subatomic realm. We make sense of the first three through
programming rules and various fields of classical mechanics; the
fourth is something else entirely.

A graphic concept of quantum technology depicts two ships at sea in the background and a large, stylized molecule in the foreground. Naval Information Warfare Center (NIWC) Pacific’s scientists and engineers are leading quantum research, collaboration, and training among warfare centers. (U.S. Navy illustration by NIWC Pacific
- February 15, 2023)
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For one, classical physics can predict,
with simple mathematics, how an object will move and where it will
be at any given point in time and space. How objects interact with
each other and their environments follow laws we first encounter in
high school science textbooks.
What happens in minuscule
realms isn’t so easily explained. At the level of atoms and their
parts, measuring position and momentum simultaneously yields only
probability. Knowing a particle’s exact state is a zero-sum game in
which classical notions of determinism don’t apply: the more certain
we are about its momentum, the less certain we are about where it
will be.
We’re not exactly
sure what it will be, either. That particle could be both an
electron and a wave of energy, existing in multiple states at once.
When we observe it, we force a “quantum choice,” and the particle
collapses from its state of superposition into one of its possible
forms.
Just as subatomic matter can exist two ways at once,
it marks a strange intersection of order and disorder. While it’s
hard to hammer down exactly what or where a particle will be, energy
at the subatomic level moves only in discrete, concerted packets, or
quanta, defying classical notions about continuous transfer of
energy.
Then there’s quantum entanglement, what Albert
Einstein called “spooky action at a distance.” It’s often described
as two dice that always show the same number when rolled, together
or even miles apart. When an entangled particle is measured, its
partner instantaneously matches the measured particle’s state.
For Joanna Ptasinski, head of NIWC Pacific’s Cryogenic
Electronics and Quantum Research branch, this strangeness is what
defines quantum: it’s a complex system of matter or information
where these phenomena ... which can’t be explained by classical
notions of how the world works ... are possible.
“Quantum is
quirky,” said Ptasinski, who holds a doctorate in electrical
engineering. “Its essence is superposition and entanglement. We’re
researching the power ... the naval applications ... lurking behind
this weirdness.”
Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle,
superposition, and entanglement are all part of a growing
mathematical framework for subatomic phenomena called quantum
mechanics, and it raises questions about the nature of reality as we
know it. What can we learn from entangled particles for which space
... even vast expanses of it ... is no obstacle? If matter exists in
many forms at once until we observe it, what role does observation
play in building the world around us? And how do we harness a domain
defined by potentiality?
This is what NIWC Pacific scientists
explore in its labs, with its partners, and on the National Science
& Technology Council’s Subcommittee on Quantum Information Science.
With quantum experts from across the nation, they ask: What will
harnessing quantum phenomena mean for the Navy and the warfighter?
Answers fall in a few categories: sensing, computing,
communications, and materials, and the Center has projects to show
for each. Answers outside of practical applications have to do with
building a quantum Navy: attracting dedicated talent, giving and
receiving training, and contributing to national discussions about
the future of quantum technology.
All answers point to a
vision of a Navy equipped with even more secure communications
networks, more advanced sensors, and the faster threat detection and
response that comes with them. It’s a vision of improved navigation,
smarter autonomous systems, and more accurate modeling and
simulation. It’s unprecedented decision advantage at quantum speed
in an increasingly uncertain world.
To Ptasinski, it’s more
advanced supporting technologies. “That’s what is needed in order
for the field to mature,” she said. “How about a dilution fridge
that isn't half the size of this office? Why not a small dilution
fridge? And is that even possible?”
The dilution fridge
provides the low temperatures needed to measure quantum systems with
accuracy. NIWC Pacific’s dilution fridge functions in the tens of
millikelvin ... colder than outer space ... and is one of only two
across all warfare centers and the Naval Research Laboratory.
With a dilution fridge, researchers can measure and manipulate
qubits, or bits of quantum information. Unlike classical bits,
qubits can be in superposition of both binary values 0 and 1 at the
same time. That superposition is the key to quantum computing’s
exponential power.
Measuring the path of a qubit through
steps in a quantum system is fundamental for quantum research; it
teaches us how quantum systems work. And the more we know about how
they work, the more we can use them to perform powerful
computations.
Ptasinski explains this quantum walk by
drawing what looks like a Pachinko machine on the back of this story
draft. Drop a particle in at the top and use a traditional computer
to figure out in which slot it will end up at the bottom, and you’re
looking at a major computational task. With just 10 entangled
photons and eight layers of potential paths, knowing the probability
distributions of where each particle will end up would require more
circuits than there are stars in the universe.
Enter quantum.
Run the same task on a quantum computer, and a qubit’s 0-and-1
superposition means more paths can be explored simultaneously. A
classical computer would have to calculate the path of a bit
expressing 0 separately from the path of a bit expressing 1; a
quantum computer can explore both at once, allowing for faster, more
intensive calculations. “It’s like doing linear algebra with complex
numbers,” Ptasinski said. “And wouldn’t it be fun to be able to do
it with smaller, more powerful equipment?”
To Ptasinski, fun
would be the ability to build and entangle superconducting qubits,
fit many qubits on a single microchip, and discover algorithms that
would mitigate errors caused by environmental interferences. “It's a
very exciting field because we have a lot of puzzles that still need
to be solved,” she said. “Our researchers don’t want to work on
something that’s been done before. We’re looking ahead at how
quantum computing can solve real-life problems for the Navy.”
Exploration of the new frontier won’t decelerate anytime soon.
Co-leads Naval Research Laboratory and NIWC Pacific established the
Naval Quantum Computing Program Office Dec. 2 where quantum subject
matter experts across all 14 naval warfare centers will collaborate
on quantum applications for the Department of Defense.
The
program office will manage access to the Air Force Research
Laboratory’s hub and its advanced quantum computing power on the IBM
Quantum Network. First up for time in the hub is a project from NIWC
Pacific.
Back in the Center's own labs, scientists and
engineers are making arrangements for a new government-owned
facility dedicated to quantum research. They’ll make and test their
own prototypes in a lab designed to perform powerful, ultra-precise
quantum experimentation.
Ptasinski continues to organize
training opportunities for scientists at the Center and across the
country. Soon NIWC Pacific will host a professor from the Naval
Postgraduate School to teach a course on the fundamentals of quantum
mechanics, which will also be open to the Defense Intelligence
Agency.
High performers will get a shot at a seat in IBM’s
Quantum Summer School, where distinguished quantum experts teach a
small group of students from across the globe. Then NIWC Pacific
students will make their way back to its quantum optics laboratory
for hands-on experiments led by Ptasinski and her colleagues.
“We have many dedicated and motivated scientists and engineers
expanding our quantum portfolio,” Ptasinski said when asked why NIWC
Pacific is the right team for the job. “Our researchers have
connections to not only industry and other government labs, but also
with researchers across the world. We’re the U.S. experts in
high-temperature superconductor sensors. Among the warfare centers,
we’re leading quantum information science and technology.”
There’s more to learn about quantum, the puzzle with no visible
pieces. Zoom in and you’ll find shapeshifting pieces which match
each other even miles apart, and a precarious system that falls out
of its quantum state and into a classical one at the wrong
temperature. But despite all its precarity and complexity, over
hours of conversations about building a quantum Navy, Ptasinski
expressed no doubts about the Center’s ability to solve it.
If we are experiments away from making sense of the quantum world
... quanta of training, partnerships, and groundbreaking moments
away ... then scientists at NIWC Pacific are making strides toward
the answers.
NIWC Pacific’s mission is to conduct research,
development, engineering, and support of integrated command,
control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance, cyber, and space systems across all warfighting
domains, and to rapidly prototype, conduct test and evaluation, and
provide acquisition, installation, and in-service engineering
support.
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