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| Photo MIT Technology Review |
Start with what's actually inside a quantum computer. A qubit is a physical device, usually a tiny loop of superconducting metal, that can hold a mix of two states at once instead of a single 0 or 1. That mixed state is fragile. A stray photon, a vibration, or a few millikelvin of extra heat can collapse it before you get a useful calculation out of it. Physicists call that collapse decoherence, and it's the central engineering problem in the entire field. Keeping decoherence at bay is the whole reason the chandelier exists.
Why It Has to Be That Cold
At room temperature, everything around a chip is radiating heat as stray photons, trillions of them, bouncing around and hitting anything nearby. For a normal computer chip that's irrelevant. For a superconducting qubit it's fatal, since a single one of those stray photons carries enough energy to flip the qubit's state. Cooling the chip down to the mixing chamber stage, near 10 millikelvin starves the environment of those stray photons and also lets the qubit's own wiring become superconducting, meaning it carries current with zero electrical resistance. Both effects are required. Without one or the other, the qubit decoheres in nanoseconds instead of the few hundred microseconds researchers need.
The Five Stages
The gold structure is a dilution refrigerator, built from stacked stages that grow colder toward the bottom. A pulse tube cryocooler, essentially a specialized mechanical compressor, does the first heavy lifting, dropping the system from room temperature to about 40 Kelvin and then 4 Kelvin using compressed helium gas. Below that, the fridge switches to a different method. A chamber called the still boils off helium-3 to reach roughly 0.7 Kelvin, and a series of heat exchangers pushes the temperature down further, through about 0.1 Kelvin, to the mixing chamber at the very bottom. A mixture of helium-3 and helium-4 drives that last stage. The full cooldown from room temperature to base takes 24 to 48 hours, and it has to happen every time the system needs to be opened for maintenance.
Each gold disc in the photo is one of these stages, plated in gold because gold conducts heat well, resists corrosion, and doesn't interfere magnetically with the qubits. Each stage nests inside the next, shielding the colder one below it from the warmer one above.
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| Figure: the chandelier's cooling stages, colored from gold at the warmest to blue at the coldest, with the qubit chip mounted at the base. |
The Wiring Problem
Every wire running through those stages carries control signals down to the qubits and readout signals back up to room-temperature electronics. A signal heading down gets attenuated at each stage on the way, stripping out electrical noise picked up from the warmer stages above. A signal heading up gets amplified, since the qubit's own readout signal is too faint to detect at room temperature. Every one of those wires is also a heat leak. Heat travels down a wire just as easily as a signal does, and the cooling power at the base stage is measured in microwatts, barely enough to warm a fraction of a grain of rice. A single wire that's improperly thermalized can add more heat than the entire fridge can remove.
That tradeoff is why wiring, not the qubits themselves, has become one of the field's biggest scaling obstacles. Each qubit needs its own set of control and readout lines, so the number of cables required grows directly with qubit count, eventually exceeding what a single cryostat can physically hold. Labs are now racing to move some control electronics inside the fridge itself, onto chips that can survive the cold, so fewer wires have to cross from room temperature down to the millikelvin stage. A single dilution refrigerator system runs one to five million dollars, and most of that cost is solving this wiring problem.
What's Actually Quantum
The qubit chip itself sits at the very bottom, bolted to the mixing chamber, a few millimeters across. It's small enough to miss in most photos of the chandelier, which is the point. Everything above it, every gold disc, every coil of coax, every attenuator and amplifier, exists for one reason: to keep that small chip cold and quiet enough to hold a quantum state long enough to be useful. Chapter 3 of Quantum from the Ground Up makes this argument directly: physics works, engineering makes it work. The chandelier is that argument built out of gold-plated copper and helium-3.
Next time a chandelier photo turns up in your feed, look past the wiring for the small chip at the bottom. That chip is the entire quantum computer. Everything else in the picture is plumbing.
This post will fold into the next edition of Quantum from the Ground Up, out September 1.

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