Superconducting Applications in Quantum Computation
Superconducting materials could potentially be used to implement a quantum computer, a device that utilizes quantum mechanical properties to produce significantly more powerful processors than we could possibly create in a classical computer. Typically, classical computers are composed of macroscopic integrated circuits made of semi-conducting materials, which are limited by classical mechanics. A quantum computer would be capable of accessing bit states unavailable to classical bits, making them exponentially more powerful.
Background
Computers perform computations using bits, a fundamental unit of information that is either in the state 1 or 0. One bit may not be particularly powerful but many bits can hold a lot of information; a string of n bits can be in any one of states. A quantum computer would significantly increase computational power by allowing each bit to occupy 1, 0, or any superposition of those two states. This strange phenomenon is possible due to the laws of quantum mechanics, which allow the states of the quantum bits - or qubits - to be transformed in a special way.
An easy way to understand the difference between a classical computer and a quantum computer is to look at a picture of a Bloch Sphere. Imagining the north pole of the sphere to correspond to the 1 state and the south pole to correspond to the 0 state, it's clear that a vector from the sphere's origin (representing a bit state) could only point along the z-axis in a classical computer. In a quantum computer, that vector could point to the 1 state or the 0 state along the z-axis but also to any other point on the sphere, representing the possible superpositions of the 1 and 0 states. This idea is summarized in the following formula for n qubits:
where represents an allowed state and is its probability coefficient.