Quantum Computing Market Growth Trends, Key Players, Competitive Strategies and Forecasts to 2026 – Jewish Life News

Quantum Computing Market Overview

The Quantum Computing market report presents a detailed evaluation of the market. The report focuses on providing a holistic overview with a forecast period of the report extending from 2018 to 2026. The Quantum Computing market report includes analysis in terms of both quantitative and qualitative data, taking into factors such as Product pricing, Product penetration, Country GDP, movement of parent market & child markets, End application industries, etc. The report is defined by bifurcating various parts of the market into segments which provide an understanding of different aspects of the market.

The overall report is divided into the following primary sections: segments, market outlook, competitive landscape and company profiles. The segments cover various aspects of the market, from the trends that are affecting the market to major market players, in turn providing a well-rounded assessment of the market. In terms of the market outlook section, the report provides a study of the major market dynamics that are playing a substantial role in the market. The market outlook section is further categorized into sections; drivers, restraints, opportunities and challenges. The drivers and restraints cover the internal factors of the market whereas opportunities and challenges are the external factors that are affecting the market. The market outlook section also comprises Porters Five Forces analysis (which explains buyers bargaining power, suppliers bargaining power, threat of new entrants, threat of substitutes, and degree of competition in the Quantum Computing) in addition to the market dynamics.

Get Sample Copy with TOC of the Report to understand the structure of the complete report @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/download-sample/?rid=24845&utm_source=JLN&utm_medium=007

Leading Quantum Computing manufacturers/companies operating at both regional and global levels:

Quantum Computing Market Scope Of The Report

This report offers past, present as well as future analysis and estimates for the Quantum Computing market. The market estimates that are provided in the report are calculated through an exhaustive research methodology. The research methodology that is adopted involves multiple channels of research, chiefly primary interviews, secondary research and subject matter expert advice. The market estimates are calculated on the basis of the degree of impact of the current market dynamics along with various economic, social and political factors on the Quantum Computing market. Both positive as well as negative changes to the market are taken into consideration for the market estimates.

Quantum Computing Market Competitive Landscape & Company Profiles

The competitive landscape and company profile chapters of the market report are dedicated to the major players in the Quantum Computing market. An evaluation of these market players through their product benchmarking, key developments and financial statements sheds a light into the overall market evaluation. The company profile section also includes a SWOT analysis (top three companies) of these players. In addition, the companies that are provided in this section can be customized according to the clients requirements.

To get Incredible Discounts on this Premium Report, Click Here @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/ask-for-discount/?rid=24845&utm_source=JLN&utm_medium=007

Quantum Computing Market Research Methodology

The research methodology adopted for the analysis of the market involves the consolidation of various research considerations such as subject matter expert advice, primary and secondary research. Primary research involves the extraction of information through various aspects such as numerous telephonic interviews, industry experts, questionnaires and in some cases face-to-face interactions. Primary interviews are usually carried out on a continuous basis with industry experts in order to acquire a topical understanding of the market as well as to be able to substantiate the existing analysis of the data.

Subject matter expertise involves the validation of the key research findings that were attained from primary and secondary research. The subject matter experts that are consulted have extensive experience in the market research industry and the specific requirements of the clients are reviewed by the experts to check for completion of the market study. Secondary research used for the Quantum Computing market report includes sources such as press releases, company annual reports, and research papers that are related to the industry. Other sources can include government websites, industry magazines and associations for gathering more meticulous data. These multiple channels of research help to find as well as substantiate research findings.

Table of Content

1 Introduction of Quantum Computing Market

1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology of Verified Market Research

3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Quantum Computing Market Outlook

4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Quantum Computing Market, By Deployment Model

5.1 Overview

6 Quantum Computing Market, By Solution

6.1 Overview

7 Quantum Computing Market, By Vertical

7.1 Overview

8 Quantum Computing Market, By Geography

8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Quantum Computing Market Competitive Landscape

9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles

10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix

11.1 Related Research

Customized Research Report Using Corporate Email Id @ https://www.verifiedmarketresearch.com/product/Quantum-Computing-Market/?utm_source=JLN&utm_medium=007

About us:

Verified Market Research is a leading Global Research and Consulting firm servicing over 5000+ customers. Verified Market Research provides advanced analytical research solutions while offering information enriched research studies. We offer insight into strategic and growth analyses, Data necessary to achieve corporate goals and critical revenue decisions.

Our 250 Analysts and SMEs offer a high level of expertise in data collection and governance use industrial techniques to collect and analyse data on more than 15,000 high impact and niche markets. Our analysts are trained to combine modern data collection techniques, superior research methodology, expertise and years of collective experience to produce informative and accurate research.

Contact us:

Mr. Edwyne Fernandes

US: +1 (650)-781-4080UK: +44 (203)-411-9686APAC: +91 (902)-863-5784US Toll Free: +1 (800)-7821768

Email: [emailprotected]

Our Trending Reports

Rugged Display Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

Quantum Computing Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

Sensor Patch Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

See more here:
Quantum Computing Market Growth Trends, Key Players, Competitive Strategies and Forecasts to 2026 - Jewish Life News

Verizon tunes up quantum-based technology trial in Washington D.C. to bolster security – FierceTelecom

In order to better keep communications safe and secure from hackers, Verizon recently conducted a trial of quantum key distribution (QKD) in Washington D.C. Verizon said the successful trial positioned it as one of the first carriers in the U.S. to pilot the use of QKD.

Quantum cryptography could provide a solution for the vulnerability of current cryptographic key implementations. Today, cryptographic techniques encrypt data using a secure key, which is only known to the parties using that key for decrypting the messages between them.

Those cryptographic techniques for key generation are based on highly complex mathematical problems that require long calculations to be resolved. With the growth of computational capacity, the time required to solve these problems becomes shorter, which reduces the security of the keys.

Like this story? Subscribe to FierceTelecom!

The Telecom industry is an ever-changing world where big ideas come along daily. Our subscribers rely on FierceTelecom as their must-read source for the latest news, analysis and data on the intersection of telecom and media. Sign up today to get telecom news and updates delivered to your inbox and read on the go.

With the advent of quantum computers, the principles of quantum mechanics could be applied to break the keys used in today's security implementations. By contrast, QKD could be applied to exchange a key between the two ends of a communication. QKD provides protection against the threat posed by quantum computing to current cryptographic algorithms and provides a high level of security for the exchange of data.

RELATED: Telefnica, Huawei trial quantum cryptography on optical network using SDN

Two years ago, Telefnica and Huawei conducted a successful field trial of quantum cryptography on commercial optical networks by using SDN.

In Verizon's QKD trial, live video was captured outside of three Verizon locations in the D.C. area, including the Washington DC Executive Briefing Center, the 5G Lab in D.C and Verizons Ashburn, Virginia office. Using a QKD network, quantum keys were created and exchanged over a fiber network between Verizon's locations.

In the trial, video streams were encrypted and delivered more securely allowing the recipient to see the video in real-time while instantly exposing hackers. A QKD network derives cryptographic keys using the quantum properties of photons to prevent against eavesdropping.

Verizon also demonstrated that data could be further secured with keys generated using a Quantum Random Number Generator (QRNG) that, as the name suggests, creates random numbers that cant be predicted. With QKD, encryption keys are continuously generated and are immune to attacks because any disruption to the channel breaks the quantum state of photons, which signals that eavesdroppers are present.

"The use of quantum mechanics is a great step forward in data security, said IDC Analyst Christina Richmond, in a statement. Verizon's own tests, as well other industry testing, have shown that deriving 'secret keys' between two entities via light photons effectively blocks perfect cloning by an eavesdropper if a key intercept is attempted.

"Current technological breakthroughs have proven that both the quantum channel and encrypted data channel can be sent over a single optical fiber. Verizon has demonstrated this streamlined approach brings greater efficiency for practical large-scale implementation allowing keys to be securely shared over wide-ranging networks.

Read the original here:
Verizon tunes up quantum-based technology trial in Washington D.C. to bolster security - FierceTelecom

Study: How the automotive industry will benefit from quantum computing – eeNews Europe

After companies such as IBM with its Q System One or D-Wave Technologies made headlines in recent years with supposedly usable quantum computers, various companies in the automotive value chain have taken a closer look at this technology - the promises made by manufacturers were too seductive. According to their pledges, quantum computers are ideal for solving certain problems that the best scientists have long been brooding over, such as route optimisation, fuel cell optimisation and the durability of materials.

According to the McKinsey study, some of these early users have already achieved a certain success. Volkswagen, for example, has teamed up with D-Wave to develop a traffic management system that optimises the routes of buses in urban traffic. The automotive supplier Bosch has invested $21 million in the start-up company Zapata Computing (Cambridge, Massachusetts).

However, the reluctance still far outweighs the commitment to this innovative computing technology, write the authors of the McKinsey study. The novelty of the technology and the still very narrow market have so far discouraged many companies from intensively engaging in quantum computing. It will take another five to ten years before this technology has become established in the long term. By then, quantum computing will have overcome several hurdles: Quantum Supremacy must be achieved; the practical benefit must be proven beyond doubt; application software must be available to solve concrete problems; and above all, a Quantum Turing Machine must be available. The latter means that a universally applicable quantum architecture with quantum memory and conventional main memory (RAM) must be available. Such a machine, as described by the experts at McKinsey, will be able to work with the number of qubits required by the users and execute arbitrary algorithms. Such a machine will be available in one to two decades, the study says.

Read more:
Study: How the automotive industry will benefit from quantum computing - eeNews Europe

BBVA Uncovers The Promise Of Quantum Computing For Banking And Financial Services – Forbes

Computers have underpinned the digital transformation of the banking and financial services sector, and quantum computing promises to elevate this transformation to a radically new level. BBVA, the digital bank for the 21st centuryestablished in 1857 and today the second largest bank in Spainis at the forefront of investigating the benefits of quantum computing.

Will quantum computing move banking to a new level of digital transformation?

We are trying to understand the potential impact of quantum computing over the next 5 years, says Carlos Kuchkovsky, global head of research and patents at BBVA. Last month, BBVA announced initial results from their recent exploration of quantum computings advantage over traditional computer methods. Kuchkovskys team looked at complex financial problems with many dimensions or variables that require computational calculations that sometimes take days to complete. In the case of investment portfolio optimization, for example, they found that the use of quantum and quantum-inspired algorithms could represent a significant speed-up compared to traditional techniques when there are more than 100 variables.

Carlos Kuchkovsky, Global Head of Research and Patents, BBVA

After hiring researchers with expertise in quantum computing, BBVA identified fifteen challenges that could be solved better with quantum computing, faster and with greater accuracy, says Kuchkovsky. The results released last month were for six of these challenges, serving as proofs-of-concept for, first and foremost, the development of quantum algorithms and also for their application in the following five financial services tasks: Static and dynamic portfolio optimization, credit scoring process optimization, currency arbitrage optimization, and derivative valuations and adjustments.

Another important dimension of BBVAs quantum computing journey is developing an external network. The above six proofs-of-concept were pursued in collaboration with external partners bringing to the various investigations their own set of skills and expertise: The Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), the startups Zapata Computing and Multiverse, the technology firm Fujitsu, and the consulting firm Accenture.

Kuchkovsky advises technology and business executives in other companies, in any industry, to follow BBVAs initial stepssurveying the current state of the technology and the major players, developing internal expertise and experience with quantum computing and consolidating the internal team, identifying specific business problems, activities and opportunities where quantum computing could provide an advantage over todays computers, and develop an external network by connecting to and collaborating with relevant research centers and companies.

As for how to organize internally for quantum computing explorations, Kuchkovsky thinks there could be different possibilities, depending on the level of maturity of the research and technology functions of the business. In BBVAs case, the effort started in the research function and he thinks will evolve in a year or two to a full-fledged quantum computing center of excellence.

Quantum computing is evolving rapidly and Kuchkovsky predicts that in five years, companies around the world will enjoy full access to quantum computing as a service and will benefit from the application of quantum algorithms, also provided as a service. Specifically, he thinks we will see the successful application of quantum computing to machine learning (e.g., improving fraud detection in the banking sector). With the growing interest in quantum computing, Kuchkovsky believes that in five years there will be a sufficient supply of quantum computing talent to satisfy the demand for quantum computing expertise.

The development of a talent pool of experienced and knowledgeable quantum computing professionals depends among other things on close working relationships between academia and industry. These relationships tend to steer researchers towards practical problems and specific business challenges and, in turn, helps in upgrading the skills of engineers working in large corporations and orient them toward quantum computing.

In Kuchocvskys estimation, the connection between academia and industry is relatively weaker in Europe compared to the United States. But there are examples of such collaboration, such as BBVAs work with CSIC and the European Unions Quantum Technologies Flagship, bringing together research centers, industry, and public funding agencies.

On July 29, Fujitsu announced a new collaboration with BBVA, to test whether a quantum computer could outperform traditional computing techniques in optimizing asset portfolios, helping minimize risk while maximizing returns, based on a decades worth of historical data. In the release, Kuchkovsky summarized BBVAs motivation for exploring quantum computing: Our research is helping us identify the areas where quantum computing could represent a greater competitive advantage, once the tools have sufficiently matured. At BBVA, we believe that quantum technology will be key to solving some of the major challenges facing society this decade. Addressing these challenges dovetails with BBVAs strategic priorities, such as fostering the more efficient use of increasingly greater volumes of data for better decision-making as well as supporting the transition to a more sustainable future.

Continued here:
BBVA Uncovers The Promise Of Quantum Computing For Banking And Financial Services - Forbes

Tufts Joins Major Effort to Build the Next Generation of Quantum Computers – Tufts Now

Tufts is joining a major U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) funded center called the Quantum Systems Accelerator (QSA), led by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The center hopes to create the next generation of quantum computers and apply them to the study of some of the most challenging problems in physics, chemistry, materials science, and more.

The QSA is one of five new DOE Quantum Information Science research centers announced on Aug. 26, and will be funded with $115 million over five years, supporting dozens of scientists at 15 institutions.

Peter Love, an associate professor of physics, will lead Tufts participation in the project. We have long been interested in using quantum computers for calculations in physics and chemistry, said Love.

A large-scale quantum computer would be a very powerful instrument for studying everything from the structure of large molecules to the nature and behavior of subatomic particles, he said. The only difficulty is that the quantum computers we need dont exist yet.

Quantum computers employ a fundamentally different approach to computing than those existing now, using quantum states of atoms, ions, light, quantum dots or superconducting circuits to store information.

The QSA will bring together world-class researchers and facilities to develop quantum systems that could significantly exceed the capability of todays computers. Multidisciplinary teams across all the institutions will work toward advancing qubit technologythe manner and materials in which information is stored in a quantum state, and other components of quantum computers.

Loves research will focus on developing simulation algorithms in areas such as particle and nuclear physics, which will be run by the new quantum computers. It is important to work hard on the algorithms now, so we are ready when the hardware appears, he said. Love is also part of a National Science Foundation-funded effort to develop a quantum computer and applications to run on it.

Quantum computing is an important and growing area of research at Tufts. Tom Vandervelde, an associate professor in electrical and computer engineering, Luke Davis, an assistant professor of chemistry, and Cristian Staii, an associate professor of physics, are exploring new materials capable of storing qubits.

Philip Shushkov, Charles W. Fotis Assistant Professor of Chemistry, has research focused on theoretical modeling of qubit materials, while Misha Kilmer, William Walker Professor of Mathematics, and Xiaozhe Hu, associate professor of mathematics, study quantum-inspired algorithms relevant to their research in linear algebra. Bruce Boghosian, professor of mathematics, also made some fundamental contributions to quantum simulation in the late 1990s.

Mike Silver can be reached at mike.silver@tufts.edu.

Continued here:
Tufts Joins Major Effort to Build the Next Generation of Quantum Computers - Tufts Now

The big promise of Elon Musks neuralink with extended reality – Livemint

Last week, a healthy, happy pig" named Gertrude attained her 15 seconds of fame. This was courtesy Elon Musk, the serial entrepreneur and now the third-richest man in the world, who demonstrated his latest venture, Neuralink, an ultra-high bandwidth brain-machine interface (BMI) to connect humans and computers. As this column has often gushed about Musk, he thinks new and big, and Neuralink did live up to its billing, certainly from a public relations viewpoint. Reactions to it from the scientific community were mixed, and we will discuss those in a forthcoming column.

But what Neuralink did was to fire a few of my memory neurons and take me back to a programme I attended at Singularity University. In a session by a professor there, Jody Medich, I saw a quote by Satya Nadella: The future of computing will be driven by Quantum, AI and XR". While I understood why he talked about AI (artificial intelligence) and quantum computing, it was his mention of XR in the same breath that threw me. XR or extended reality includes technologies like AR (augmented reality), VR (virtual reality) and MR (mixed reality). I had always considered XR an afterthought to blockbusters like AI, blockchain, Internet of Things, etc. But Nadella was thinking otherwise. I learnt that XR was not just a tool to make Pokmon Go, or to show you a car in different colours, it was something that could make paralyzed war veterans walk, or the sightless see", much like what BMI was promising.

XR is big in enterprise usage, with Statista and the International Data Corp estimating the markets worth at $209 billion by 2022, powered by a shipment of 66 million AR/VR headsets. Applications include training in unsafe areas; retailing by way of virtual apparel, shoes, property, etc.; entertainment via virtual music festivals; and travel where you can see giraffes without going to Kenya (good for covid times). XR has great potential in healthcare. For instance, it could show the veins in your arm for accurate intravenous drug administration. Solar installations use XR with overlays and heads-up displays, increasing efficiency and safety.

While these are great, what makes this technology a superpower is the merging of the digital, physical and biological". Consider the cerebral cortex of our brain, specifically the neo-cortex, which is concerned with sight and hearing. XR explicitly works on one part of this, the primary visual cortex, the part that enables us to see. It is here where XR can work its magic. It can amplify our vision and literally rewire our brain.

One application of this XR-rewiring is pain reduction. VRHealth, an Israeli firm, works on using VR to cure migraine pains, for instance. Our brain is like a CPU75% of that CPU goes to visuals and sound," says founder Eran Orr. When we overload our CPU with an immersive technology like VR, things like pain can get downgraded in the priority list. That is why its amazing for pain management or pain distraction. Once you combine that with actual rehab, its a game-changer." The New York Times has written of Hollie Davis, who owes her current full mobility to trying VR as part of her treatment for a persistent, life-inhibiting pain after a motorcycle accident. She spent 10 or 20 minutes in a dark room while a head-mounted 3-D screen transported her to a very relaxing place, taught her about the nature of pain, how oxygen travels through the body, then how to breathe, focus on her breathing, relax her body and think of nothing else." The device engages multiple senses, essentially flooding the brain with so much input that it cannot register pain signals. When pain messages try to get through, the brain gives a busy signal".

VR can help restore feelings in paraplegics. Recently, researchers worked on eight chronic paraplegics", where the studys participants underwent a year-long training module that used BMIs combined with virtual reality tech. Half the patients were upgraded from chronic" to incomplete paraplegia" as their status classification. One of them, who had suffered from paralysis for 13 years, was able to move her legs without the help of a support harness.

As Medich puts it, XR can be used to provide cognitive ergonomics". While physical ergonomics amplifies manpower, cognitive ergonomics amplifies brain power. XR, combined with Neuralink-like technologies, therefore, will be super powerful. They could help the disabled walk again and let the pain- ridden transcend pain. I am already wondering how cool Gertrude would look in a VR headset.

Jaspreet Bindra is the author of The Tech Whisperer, and founder of Digital Matters

Subscribe to newsletters

* Enter a valid email

* Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Read the original post:
The big promise of Elon Musks neuralink with extended reality - Livemint

Will Quantum Computers Really Destroy Bitcoin? A Look at the Future of Crypto, According to Quantum Physicist Anastasia Marchenkova – The Daily Hodl

A quantum physicist is laying out the real-world impact of quantum computers on cryptography and cryptocurrency.

In a YouTube video, quantum physicist Anastasia Marchenkova shares her two cents about the race to break encryption technology with quantum computers.

Shors [quantum] algorithm can break RSA and elliptic curve cryptography, which is a problem because a lot of our data these days is encrypted with those two algorithms. Quantum computers are not faster at everything. Theyre just faster at certain problems and it just happens that this RSA and elliptic curve encryptions fall under that umbrella.

But there are other encryption algorithms that are not affected by quantum computers and we have to discover them and then actually implement them and put them into action before a large enough quantum computer actually emerges. [Breaking cryptography] requires a huge amount of qubits, something like 10 million qubits estimated. But it was one of the first discoveries of what practical application that quantum computers can actually do.

[Quantum computing] harnesses quantum properties to actually factor numbers a lot faster, and thats the whole core of the security behind RSA encryption. The consequences of this is that our data is not going to be secure anymore if we get a big enough quantum computer. So were going to have to do something about it.

Quantum computing has recently grabbed headlines as it poses a serious threat to cryptographic algorithms which keeps cryptocurrencies and the internet secure. Quantum computers have the capability to crack complex mathematical problems as qubits or quantum bits can maintain a superimposition by being in two states at a given time.

Meanwhile, Marchenkova doesnt think crypto holders must find a way to move their Bitcoin to a quantum secure wallet immediately. But she does believe anyone holding crypto should be concerned and keep tabs on the latest developments because blockchains will one day need to be upgraded to protect against the rise of quantum computing.

Yes, you should worry. But not anytime soon. You dont need to move your Bitcoin today to some other quantum secure wallet But in general, how do we upgrade the blockchain?

We can fork it and moving forward everything will be fine assuming we find a good quantum secure algorithm. But what are we going to do with all the old coins or the coins that have all private their keys lost? Are we just going to say Sorry, bye, this part of the chain will no longer be valid unless you move it or re-encrypt it. Or are we going to find new technology?

I

Original post:
Will Quantum Computers Really Destroy Bitcoin? A Look at the Future of Crypto, According to Quantum Physicist Anastasia Marchenkova - The Daily Hodl

Has the world’s most powerful computer arrived? – The National

The quest to build the ultimate computer has taken a big step forward following breakthroughs in ensuring its answers can be trusted.

Known as a quantum computer, such a machine exploits bizarre effects in the sub-atomic world to perform calculations beyond the reach of conventional computers.

First proposed almost 40 years ago, tech giants Microsoft, Google and IBM are among those racing to exploit the power of quantum computing, which is expected to transform fields ranging from weather forecasting and drug design to artificial intelligence.

The power of quantum computers comes from their use of so-called qubits, the quantum equivalent of the 1s and 0s bits used by conventional number-crunchers.

Unlike bits, qubits exploit a quantum effect allowing them to be both 1s and 0s at the same time. The impact on processing power is astonishing. Instead of processing, say, 100 bits in one go, a quantum computer could crunch 100 qubits, equivalent to 2 to the power 100, or a million trillion trillion bits.

At least, that is the theory. The problem is that the property of qubits that gives them their abilities known as quantum superposition is very unstable.

Once created, even the slightest vibration, temperature shift or electromagnetic signal can disturb the qubits, causing errors in calculations. Unless the superposition can be maintained long enough, the quantum computer either does a few calculations well or a vast amount badly.

For years, the biggest achievement of any quantum computer involved using a few qubits to find the prime factors of 15 (which every schoolchild knows are 3 and 5).

Using complex shielding methods, researchers can now stabilise around 50 qubits long enough to perform impressive calculations.

Last October, Google claimed to have built a quantum computer that solved in 200 seconds a maths problem that would have taken an ultra-fast conventional computer more than 10,000 years.

Yet even this billion-fold speed-up is just a shadow of what would be possible if qubits could be kept stable for longer. At present, many of the qubits have their powers wasted being used to spot and fix errors.

Now two teams of researchers have independently found new ways of tackling the error problem.

Physicists at the University of Chicago have found a way of keeping qubits stable for longer not by blocking disturbances, but by blurring them.

It is like sitting on a merry-go-round with people yelling all around you

Dr Kevin Miao, computing expert

In some quantum computers, the qubits take the form of electrons whose direction of spin is a superposition of both up and down. By adding a constantly flipping magnetic field, the team found that the electrons rotated so quickly that they barely noticed outside disturbances. The researchers explain the trick with an analogy: It's like sitting on a merry-go-round with people yelling all around you, says team member Dr Kevin Miao. When the ride is still, you can hear them perfectly, but if you're rapidly spinning, the noise blurs into a background.

Describing their work in the journal Science, the team reported keeping the qubits working for about 1/50th of a second - around 10,000 times longer than their lifetime if left unshielded. According to the team, the technique is simple to use but effective against all the standard sources of disturbance. Meanwhile, researchers at the University of Sydney have come up with an algorithm that allows a quantum computer to work out how its qubits are being affected by disturbances and fix the resulting errors. Reporting their discovery in Nature Physics, the team says their method is ready for use with current quantum computers, and could work with up to 100 qubits.

These breakthroughs come at a key moment for quantum computing. Even without them, the technology is already spreading beyond research laboratories.

In June, the title of worlds most powerful quantum computer was claimed not by a tech giant but by Honeywell a company perhaps best known for central heating thermostats.

Needless to say, the claim is contested by some, not least because the machine is reported to have only six qubits. But Honeywell points out that it has focused its research on making those qubits ultra-stable which allows them to work reliably for far longer than rival systems. Numbers of qubits alone, in other words, are not everything.

And the company insists this is just the start. It plans to boost the performance of its quantum computer ten-fold each year for the next five years, making it 100,000 times more powerful still.

But apart from bragging rights, why is a company like Honeywell trying to take on the tech giants in the race for the ultimate computer ?

A key clue can be found in remarks made by Honeywell insiders to Forbes magazine earlier this month. These reveal that the company wants to use quantum computers to discover new kinds of materials.

Doing this involves working out how different molecules interact together to form materials with the right properties. Thats something conventional computers are already used for. But quantum computers wont just bring extra number-crunching power to bear. Crucially, like molecules themselves, their behaviour reflects the bizarre laws of quantum theory. And this makes them ideal for creating accurate simulations of quantum phenomena like the creation of new materials.

This often-overlooked feature of quantum computers was, in fact, the original motivation of the brilliant American physicist Richard Feynman, who first proposed their development in 1981.

Honeywell already has plans to use quantum computers to identify better refrigerants. These compounds were once notorious for attacking the Earths ozone layer, but replacements still have unwanted environmental effects. Being relatively simple chemicals, the search for better refrigerants is already within the reach of current quantum computers.

But Honeywell sees a time when far more complex molecules such as drugs will also be discovered using the technology.

For the time being, no quantum computer can match the all-round number-crunching power of standard computers. Just as Honeywell made its claim, the Japanese computer maker Fujitsu unveiled a supercomputer capable of over 500 million billion calculations a second.

Even so, the quantum computer is now a reality and before long it will make even the fastest supercomputer seem like an abacus.

Robert Matthews is Visiting Professor of Science at Aston University, Birmingham, UK

Updated: August 21, 2020 12:06 PM

See the original post here:
Has the world's most powerful computer arrived? - The National

Reducing the data, energy and emissions of big data computing – ABC News

Robyn Williams: And another quantum professional is Jayne Thompson, now in Singapore, again with Pauline Newman.

Pauline Newman: Where do you come from?

Jayne Thompson: I'm originally from Brisbane actually but I did a lot of my undergraduate and my PhD at the University of Melbourne.

Pauline Newman: So you're a quantum physicist. What do you study in particular?

Jayne Thompson: We do a lot of work on building better quantum devices for different technological applications. This can include things such as sensing or computing or quantum algorithms, even things such as cryptography and communication protocols.

But one of the things that I do a lot of work on is building quantum devices which generate predictions about the future. So something which may run you a forecasting or a prediction about what the events are going to be for a specific physical system in your environment based on the data you've collected so far about its past behaviour.

Quantum technologies right at the moment face a big problem with big data. This is a global problem, but in the case of the energy we expend to actually store data in servers, it can actually rival the costs of the global airline industry.

Pauline Newman: Really?

Jayne Thompson: Yes, actually data storage has humongous problems. It's actually having dramatic effects on the climate and on the budget of different countries, and this is a very big, pressing and growing problem in the sciences. So the devices we build allow you to generate predictions while tracking less information in the dataset, but you can still make the same forecasting predictions.

Pauline Newman: I know that quantum computers are a long way in the future, so what you're doing now, has it got any real-life practical value?

Jayne Thompson: There's a lot of investment and a lot of effort going on at the moment to develop them, and there has been quite a few breakthroughs in recent years, in particular Google announced a new chip.

Pauline Newman: What, a quantum chip?

Jayne Thompson: Yes, actually it is, it's a superconducting chip which is going to be a prototype for a new type of quantum computer, and they are going really well, actually, their engineering is really quite impressive. But quantum information is very fragile, and whenever the information accidentally interacts with something in the environment, we tend to lose some of it, it sort of dissipates into the environment, decoheres.

Pauline Newman: And you said that you were trying to look at problems and predict the future. Have you got a favourite sort of problem that you're looking at?

Jayne Thompson: So you might have something like the stock market or the weather system, and as long as it takes all the information, it takes long histories, to understand what it's going to do next, quantum devices seem to be very effectual at modelling these systems.

Pauline Newman: How did you end up in Singapore?

Jayne Thompson: That's a good question. They have a rather excellent Centre for Quantum Technologies. It's world-leading actually, particularly in theoretical quantum information science. A while ago I began visiting and talking to the people there, and I enjoyed my conversations, and I thought the stuff they did was very interesting, so that was sufficient to make me excited about the prospects.

Pauline Newman: Do you go back to Australia much?

Jayne Thompson: Yes, all the time. It's very nice to be so close to home, and there are some really good experimental groups in Australia. I think it's underappreciated, but Australia is one of the leading locations for quantum information science, and this applies to both their theorists, who are extremely good, and their experimentalists who really pack a punch, they pull above their weight. So we go back very regularly and we have a lot of collaborations with them. Yes, I really enjoy collaborating with Australians, the culture of the science there is really nice.

Pauline Newman: Thank you so much, Jayne.

Jayne Thompson: Thank you.

Robyn Williams: Jayne Thompson, based in Singapore, with Pauline Newman.

Excerpt from:
Reducing the data, energy and emissions of big data computing - ABC News

Look inside IBMs offices that have been redesigned during coronavirus – Business Insider – Business Insider

As companies begin considering reopening their offices during the coronavirus pandemic, they are faced with a difficult question how do you bring employees back to work while also ensuring their safety?

IBM has been dealing with this challenge since early March. The tech gianthas about 350,000 employees worldwide, some of whom are considered essential workers.

Bob Wisnieff, chief technology officer of quantum computing at IBM, who oversees some of the company's most expensive equipment, (equipment that needs daily check-ins and tunings) was tapped to help keep IBM's headquarters in Yorktown Heights, New York, up and running.

Wisnieff devised a plan for the headquarters that other leaders could copy and apply to other global locations.

"Our main question was: How can we make sure that the people on site are going to be working as safely as possible?" Wisnieff told Business Insider. "We retooled many many aspects of our site."

Winsieff worked with state officials, an internal crisis response team, and the building's managers, to keep the office up and running for essential workers like those who oversee IBM's top tech hardware devices. The office has since granted access to 10-15% of IBMs normal Yorktown Heights personnel who may need occasional entry to the technology and space.

IBM gave Business Insider a virtual tour of what it's like to work in an office that has been prepped to keep employees safe from coronavirus.

See more here:
Look inside IBMs offices that have been redesigned during coronavirus - Business Insider - Business Insider

Quantum Computers Have the Potential to be Faster and More Powerful Than Classical Computers – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business Wire

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--ResearchAndMarkets.com published a new article on the quantum computing industry "Quantum Computers Have the Potential to be Faster and More Powerful Than Classical Computers"

Quantum computing startup Rigetti Computing announced that it has closed a $79 million Series C funding round. The company currently offers cloud based access to its quantum machines. Quantum computers are built around the concept of quantum bits or qbits which give them the potential to be much faster and much more powerful than classical computers. While quantum computers may not yet be ready for real world use cases, the industry has made significant progress in recent years.

Microsoft and ETH Zurich recently developed a quantum algorithm that can simulate catalytic processes extremely quickly which could help to develop an efficient method for carbon fixation. This process reduces carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by turning it into useful compounds. IBM has joined with the University of Tokyo to create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium (QIIC) to accelerate quantum computing research and development in Japan. QIIC members will have cloud access to the IBM Quantum Computation Center as well as access to a dedicated quantum system planned for installation in Japan in 2021.

To see the full article and a list of related reports on the market, visit "Quantum Computers Have the Potential to be Faster and More Powerful Than Classical Computers"

About ResearchAndMarkets.com

ResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

Read more:
Quantum Computers Have the Potential to be Faster and More Powerful Than Classical Computers - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business Wire

What Is Quantum Supremacy And Quantum Computing? (And How Excited Should We Be?) – Forbes

In 2019, Google announced with much fanfare that it had achieved quantum supremacy the point at which a quantum computer can perform a task that would be impossible for a conventional computer (or would take so long it would be entirely impractical for a conventional computer).

What Is Quantum Supremacy And Quantum Computing? (And How Excited Should We Be?)

To achieve quantum supremacy, Googles quantum computer completed a calculation in 200 seconds that Google claimed would have taken even the most powerful supercomputer 10,000 years to complete. IBM loudly protested this claim, stating that Google had massively underestimated the capacity of its supercomputers (hardly surprising since IBM also has skin in the quantum computing game). Nonetheless, Googles announcement was hailed as a significant milestone in the quantum computing journey.

But what exactly is quantum computing?

Not sure what quantum computing is? Dont worry, youre not alone. In very simple terms, quantum computers are unimaginably fast computers capable of solving seemingly unsolvable problems. If you think your smartphone makes computers from the 1980s seem painfully old fashioned, quantum computers will make our current state-of-the-art technology look like something out of the Stone Age. Thats how big a leap quantum computing represents.

Traditional computers are, at their heart, very fast versions of the simplest electronic calculators. They are only capable of processing one bit of information at a time, in the form of a binary 1 or 0. Each bit is like an on/off switch with 0 meaning "off" and 1 meaning "on." Every task you complete on a traditional computer, no matter how complex, is ultimately using millions of bits, each one representing either a 0 or a 1.

But quantum computers dont rely on bits; they use qubits. And qubits, thanks to the marvels of quantum mechanics, arent limited to being either on or off. They could be both at the same time, or exist somewhere in between. Thats because quantum computing harnesses the peculiar phenomena that take place at a sub-atomic level in particular, the ability of quantum particles to exist in multiple states at the same time (known as superposition).

This allows quantum computers to look at many different variables at the same time, which means they can crunch through more scenarios in a much shorter space of time than even the fastest computers available today.

What does this mean for our everyday lives?

Reaching quantum supremacy is clearly an important milestone, yet were still a long way from commercially available quantum computers hitting the market. Right now, current quantum computing work is limited to labs and major tech players like Google, IBM, and Microsoft.

Most technology experts, myself included, would admit we dont yet fully understand how quantum computing will transform our world we just know that it will. Its like trying to imagine how the internet or social media would transform our world before they were introduced.

Here are just some of the ways in which quantum computers could be put to good use:

Strengthening cyber security. Quantum computers could change the landscape of data security by creating virtually unbreakable encryption.

Accelerating artificial intelligence. Quantum computing could provide a massive boost to AI, since these superfast computers will prove far more effective at recognizing patterns in data.

Modeling traffic flows to improve our cities. Modeling traffic is an enormously complex process with a huge number of variables, but researchers at Volkswagen have been running quantum pilot programs to model and optimize the flow of traffic through city centers in Beijing, Barcelona, and Lisbon.

Making the weather forecast more accurate. Just about anything that involves complex modeling could be made more efficient with quantum computing. The UKs Met Office has said that it believes quantum computers offer the potential for carrying out far more advanced modeling than is currently possible today, and it is one of the avenues being explored for building next-generation forecasting systems.

Developing new medicines. Biotech startup ProteinQure has been exploring the potential of quantum computing in modeling protein, a key route in drug development. In other words, quantum computing could lead to the discovery of effective new drugs for some of the worlds biggest killers, including cancer and heart disease.

Most experts agree that truly useful quantum computing is not likely to be a feature of everyday life for some time. And even when quantum computers are commercially available, we as individuals will hardly be lining up to buy one. For most of the tasks we carry out on computers and smartphones, a traditional binary computer or smartphone will be all we need. But at an industry and society level, quantum computing could bring many exciting opportunities in the future.

Quantum computing is just one of 25 technology trends that I believe will transform our society. Read more about these key trends including plenty of real-world examples in my new book, Tech Trends in Practice: The 25 Technologies That Are Driving The 4th Industrial Revolution.

Read the rest here:
What Is Quantum Supremacy And Quantum Computing? (And How Excited Should We Be?) - Forbes

Scientists Have Shown There’s No ‘Butterfly Effect’ in the Quantum World – VICE

Of all the reasons for wanting to time-travelsaving someone from a fatal mistake, exploring ancient civilizations, gathering evidence about unsolved crimesrecovering lost information isnt the most exciting. But even if a quest to recover the file that didnt auto-save doesn't sound like a Hollywood movie plot, weve all had moments when weve longed to go back in time for exactly that reason.

Theories of time and time-travel have highlighted an apparent stumbling block: time travel requires changing the past, even simply by adding in the time traveller. The problem, according to chaos theory, is that the smallest of changes can cause radical consequences in the future. In this conception of time travel, it wouldnt be advisable to recover your unsaved document since this act would have huge knock-on effects on everything else.

New research in quantum physics from Los Alamos National Laboratory has shown that the so-called butterfly effect can be overcome in the quantum realm in order to unscramble lost information by essentially reversing time.

In a paper published in July, researchers Bin Yan and Nikolai Sinitsyn write that a thought experiment in unscrambling information with time-reversing operations would be expected to lead to the same butterfly effect as the one in the famous Ray Bradburys story A Sound of Thunder In that short story, a time traveler steps on an insect in the deep past and returns to find the modern world completely altered, giving rise to the idea we refer to as the butterfly effect.

In contrast," they wrote, "our result shows that by the end of a similar protocol the local information is essentially restored.

"The primary focus of this work is not 'time travel'physicists do not have an answer yet to tell whether it is possible and how to do time travel in the real world, Yan clarified.

[But] since our protocol involves a 'forward' and a 'backward' evolution of the qubits, achieved by changing the orders of quantum gates in the circuit, it has a nice interpretation in terms of Ray Bradbury's story for the butterfly effect. So, it is an accurate and useful way to understand our results."

What is the butterfly effect?

The world does not behave in a neat, ordered way. If it did, identical events would always produce the same patterns of knock-on effects, and the future would be entirely predictable, or deterministic. Chaos theory claims that the opposite: total randomness is not our situation either. We exist somewhere in the middle, in a world that often appears random but in fact obeys rules and patterns.

Patterns within chaos are hidden because they are highly sensitive to tiny changes, which means similar but not identical situations can produce wildly different outcomes. Another way of putting it is that in a chaotic world, effects can be totally out of proportion to their causes, like the metaphor of a flap of butterfly wings causing a tornado on the other side of the world. On the tornado side of the world, the storm would seem random, because the connection between the butterfly-flap and the tornado is too complex to be apparent. While this butterfly effect is the classic poetic metaphor illustrating chaos theory, chaotic dynamics also play out in real-world contexts, including population growth in the Canadian lynx species and the rotation of Plutos moons.

Another feature of chaos is that, even though the rules are deterministic, the future is not predictable in the long-term. Since chaos is so sensitive to small variations, there are near-infinite ways the rules could play out and we would need to know an impossible amount of detail about the present and past to map out exactly how the world will evolve.

Similarly, you cant reverse-engineer some piece of information about the past simply by knowing the current and even future situations; time-travel doesnt help retrieve past information, because even moving backwards in time, the chaotic system is still in play and will produce unpredictable effects.

Information scrambling

Unscrambling information which has previously been scrambled is not straightforward in a chaotic system. Yan and Sinitsyns key discovery is that it is nonetheless possible in quantum computing to get enough information via time-reversal which will then enable information unscrambling.

According to Yan, the fact that the butterfly effect does not occur in quantum realms is not a surprising result, but demonstrating information unscrambling is both novel and important.

In quantum information theory, scrambling occurs when the information encoded in each quantum particle is split up and redistributed across multiple quantum particles in the same quantum system. The scrambling is not random, since information redistribution relies on quantum entanglement, which means that the states of some quantum particles are dependent on each other. Although the scrambled result is seemingly chaotic, the information can be put back together, at least in principle, using the entangled relationships.

Importantly, information scrambling is not the same as information loss. To continue the earlier analogy: information loss occurs when a document is permanently deleted from your computer. For information scrambling, imagine cutting and pasting tiny bits of one computer file into every other file on your machine. Each file now contains a mess of information snippets. You could reconstruct the original files, if you remembered exactly which bits were cut and pasted, and did the entire process in reverse.

Physicists are interested in information scrambling for two main reasons. On the theoretical side, its been proposed as a way to explain what happens to information sucked into a black hole. On the more applied side, it could be an important mechanism for quantum computers to store and hide information, and could produce fast and efficient quantum simulators, which are used already to perform complex experiments including new drug discovery.

Yan and Sinitsyn fall into the second camp, and construct what they call a practically accessible scenario to test unscrambling by time-travel. This scenario is still hypothetical, but explores the mathematics of the actual quantum processor used by Google to demonstrate quantum supremacy in 2019.

Yan says: Another potential application is to use this effect to protect information. A random evolution on a quantum circuit can make the qubit robust to perturbations. One may further exploit the discovered effect to design protocols in quantum cryptography.

The set-up

In Yan and Sinitsyn's quantum thought experiment, Alice and Bob are the protagonists. Alice is using a simplified version of Googles quantum processor to hide just one part of the information stored on the computer (called the central qubit) by scrambling this qubits state across all the other qubits (called the qubit bath). Bob is cast as the intruder, much like a malicious computer hacker. He wants the important information originally stored on the central qubit, now distributed across entangled quantum particles in the bath.

Unfortunately, Bobs hack, while successful in getting the information he wanted, leaves a trail of destruction.

If her processor has already scrambled the information, Alice is sure that Bob cannot get anything useful, the authors write. However, Bobs measurement changes the state of the central qubit and also destroys all quantum correlations between this qubit and the rest of the system.

Bob's method of information theft has altered the computer state so that Alice can also no longer access the hidden information. In this case, the damage occurs because quantum states contain all possible values they could have, with assigned probabilities of each value, but these possibilities (represented by the wave function) collapse down to just one value when a measurement is taken. Quantum computing relies on unmeasured quantum systems to store even more information in multiple possible states, and Bobs intrusion has totally altered the computer system.

Reversing time

Theoretically, the behaviour of a quantum system moving backwards in time can be demonstrated mathematically using whats called a time-reversed evolution operator, which is exactly what Alice uses to de-scramble the information.

Her time-reversal is not actually time travel the way we understand it from science fiction, it is literally a reversal of times direction; the system evolves backwards following whatever dynamics are in play, rather than Alice herself revisiting an earlier time. If the butterfly effect held in the quantum world, then this backwards evolution would actually increase the damage Bob had caused, and Alice would only be able to retrieve the hidden information if she knew exactly what that damage was and could correct her calculations accordingly.

Luckily for Alice, quantum systems behave totally differently to non-quantum (classical or semiclassical) chaotic systems. What Yan and Sinitsyn found is that she can apply her time-reversal operation and end up at an "earlier" state which will not be identical with the initial system she set up, but it will also not have increased the damage which occurred later. Alice can then reconstruct her initial system using a method of quantum unscrambling called quantum state tomography.

What this means is that a quantum system can effectively heal and even recover information that was scrambled in the past, without the chaos of the butterfly effect.

Classical chaotic evolution magnifies any state damage exponentially quickly, which is known as the butterfly effect, explain Yan and Sinitsyn. The quantum evolution, however, is

linear. This explains why, in our case, the uncontrolled damage to the state is not magnified by the subsequent complex evolution. Moreover, the fact that Bobs measurement does not damage the useful information follows from the property of entanglement correlations in the scrambled state.

Hypothetical though this scenario may be, the result already has a practical use: verifying whether a quantum system has achieved quantum supremacy. Quantum processors can simulate time-reversal in a way that classical computers cannot, which could provide the next important test for the quantum race between Google and IBM.

So, while time travel is still not in the cards, the quantum world continues to mess with our classical conception of how the world evolves in time, and pushes the limits of computing information.

See more here:
Scientists Have Shown There's No 'Butterfly Effect' in the Quantum World - VICE

This Twist on Schrdinger’s Cat Paradox Has Major Implications for Quantum Theory – Scientific American

What does it feel like to be both alive and dead?

That question irked and inspired Hungarian-American physicist Eugene Wigner in the 1960s. He was frustrated by the paradoxes arising from the vagaries of quantum mechanicsthe theory governing the microscopic realm that suggests, among many other counterintuitive things, that until a quantum system is observed, it does not necessarily have definite properties. Take his fellow physicist Erwin Schrdingers famous thought experiment in which a cat is trapped in a box with poison that will be released if a radioactive atom decays. Radioactivity is a quantum process, so before the box is opened, the story goes, the atom has both decayed and not decayed, leaving the unfortunate cat in limboa so-called superposition between life and death. But does the cat experience being in superposition?

Wigner sharpened the paradox by imagining a (human) friend of his shut in a lab, measuring a quantum system. He argued it was absurd to say his friend exists in a superposition of having seen and not seen a decay unless and until Wigner opens the lab door. The Wigners friend thought experiment shows that things can become very weird if the observer is also observed, says Nora Tischler, a quantum physicist at Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia.

Now Tischler and her colleagues have carried out a version of the Wigners friend test. By combining the classic thought experiment with another quantum head-scratcher called entanglementa phenomenon that links particles across vast distancesthey have also derived a new theorem, which they claim puts the strongest constraints yet on the fundamental nature of reality. Their study, which appeared in Nature Physics on August 17, has implications for the role that consciousness might play in quantum physicsand even whether quantum theory must be replaced.

The new work is an important step forward in the field of experimental metaphysics, says quantum physicist Aephraim Steinberg of the University of Toronto, who was not involved in the study. Its the beginning of what I expect will be a huge program of research.

Until quantum physics came along in the 1920s, physicists expected their theories to be deterministic, generating predictions for the outcome of experiments with certainty. But quantum theory appears to be inherently probabilistic. The textbook versionsometimes called the Copenhagen interpretationsays that until a systems properties are measured, they can encompass myriad values. This superposition only collapses into a single state when the system is observed, and physicists can never precisely predict what that state will be. Wigner held the then popular view that consciousness somehow triggers a superposition to collapse. Thus, his hypothetical friend would discern a definite outcome when she or he made a measurementand Wigner would never see her or him in superposition.

This view has since fallen out of favor. People in the foundations of quantum mechanics rapidly dismiss Wigners view as spooky and ill-defined because it makes observers special, says David Chalmers, a philosopher and cognitive scientist at New York University. Today most physicists concur that inanimate objects can knock quantum systems out of superposition through a process known as decoherence. Certainly, researchers attempting to manipulate complex quantum superpositions in the lab can find their hard work destroyed by speedy air particles colliding with their systems. So they carry out their tests at ultracold temperatures and try to isolate their apparatuses from vibrations.

Several competing quantum interpretations have sprung up over the decades that employ less mystical mechanisms, such as decoherence, to explain how superpositions break down without invoking consciousness. Other interpretations hold the even more radical position that there is no collapse at all. Each has its own weird and wonderful take on Wigners test. The most exotic is the many worlds view, which says that whenever you make a quantum measurement, reality fractures, creating parallel universes to accommodate every possible outcome. Thus, Wigners friend would split into two copies and, with good enough supertechnology, he could indeed measure that person to be in superposition from outside the lab, says quantum physicist and many-worlds fan Lev Vaidman of Tel Aviv University.

The alternative Bohmian theory (named for physicist David Bohm) says that at the fundamental level, quantum systems do have definite properties; we just do not know enough about those systems to precisely predict their behavior. In that case, the friend has a single experience, but Wigner may still measure that individual to be in a superposition because of his own ignorance. In contrast, a relative newcomer on the block called the QBism interpretation embraces the probabilistic element of quantum theory wholeheartedly (QBism, pronounced cubism, is actually short for quantum Bayesianism, a reference to 18th-century mathematician Thomas Bayess work on probability.) QBists argue that a person can only use quantum mechanics to calculate how to calibrate his or her beliefs about what he or she will measure in an experiment. Measurement outcomes must be regarded as personal to the agent who makes the measurement, says Ruediger Schack of Royal Holloway, University of London, who is one of QBisms founders.According to QBisms tenets, quantum theory cannot tell you anything about the underlying state of reality, nor can Wigner use it to speculate on his friends experiences.

Another intriguing interpretation, called retrocausality, allows events in the future to influence the past. In a retrocausal account, Wigners friend absolutely does experience something, says Ken Wharton, a physicist at San Jose State University, who is an advocate for this time-twisting view. But that something the friend experiences at the point of measurement can depend upon Wigners choice of how to observe that person later.

The trouble is that each interpretation is equally goodor badat predicting the outcome of quantum tests, so choosing between them comes down to taste. No one knows what the solution is, Steinberg says. We dont even know if the list of potential solutions we have is exhaustive.

Other models, called collapse theories, do make testable predictions. These models tack on a mechanism that forces a quantum system to collapse when it gets too bigexplaining why cats, people and other macroscopic objects cannot be in superposition. Experiments are underway to hunt for signatures of such collapses, but as yet they have not found anything. Quantum physicists are also placing ever larger objects into superposition: last year a team in Vienna reported doing so with a 2,000-atom molecule. Most quantum interpretations say there is no reason why these efforts to supersize superpositions should not continue upward forever, presuming researchers can devise the right experiments in pristine lab conditions so that decoherence can be avoided. Collapse theories, however, posit that a limit will one day be reached, regardless of how carefully experiments are prepared. If you try and manipulate a classical observera human, sayand treat it as a quantum system, it would immediately collapse, says Angelo Bassi, a quantum physicist and proponent of collapse theories at the University of Trieste in Italy.

Tischler and her colleagues believed that analyzing and performing a Wigners friend experiment could shed light on the limits of quantum theory. They were inspired by a new wave of theoretical and experimental papers that have investigated the role of the observer in quantum theory by bringing entanglement into Wigners classic setup. Say you take two particles of light, or photons, that are polarized so that they can vibrate horizontally or vertically. The photons can also be placed in a superposition of vibrating both horizontally and vertically at the same time, just as Schrdingers paradoxical cat can be both alive and dead before it is observed.

Such pairs of photons can be prepared togetherentangledso that their polarizations are always found to be in the opposite direction when observed. That may not seem strangeunless you remember that these properties are not fixed until they are measured. Even if one photon is given to a physicist called Alice in Australia, while the other is transported to her colleague Bob in a lab in Vienna, entanglement ensures that as soon as Alice observes her photon and, for instance, finds its polarization to be horizontal, the polarization of Bobs photon instantly syncs to vibrating vertically. Because the two photons appear to communicate faster than the speed of lightsomething prohibited by his theories of relativitythis phenomenon deeply troubled Albert Einstein, who dubbed it spooky action at a distance.

These concerns remained theoretical until the 1960s, when physicist John Bell devised a way to test if reality is truly spookyor if there could be a more mundane explanation behind the correlations between entangled partners. Bell imagined a commonsense theory that was localthat is, one in which influences could not travel between particles instantly. It was also deterministic rather than inherently probabilistic, so experimental results could, in principle, be predicted with certainty, if only physicists understood more about the systems hidden properties. And it was realistic, which, to a quantum theorist, means that systems would have these definite properties even if nobody looked at them. Then Bell calculated the maximum level of correlations between a series of entangled particles that such a local, deterministic and realistic theory could support. If that threshold was violated in an experiment, then one of the assumptions behind the theory must be false.

Such Bell tests have since been carried out, with a series of watertight versions performed in 2015, and they have confirmed realitys spookiness. Quantum foundations is a field that was really started experimentally by Bells [theorem]now over 50 years old. And weve spent a lot of time reimplementing those experiments and discussing what they mean, Steinberg says. Its very rare that people are able to come up with a new test that moves beyond Bell.

The Brisbane teams aim was to derive and test a new theorem that would do just that, providing even stricter constraintslocal friendliness boundson the nature of reality. Like Bells theory, the researchers imaginary one is local. They also explicitly ban superdeterminismthat is, they insist that experimenters are free to choose what to measure without being influenced by events in the future or the distant past. (Bell implicitly assumed that experimenters can make free choices, too.) Finally, the team prescribes that when an observer makes a measurement, the outcome is a real, single event in the worldit is not relative to anyone or anything.

Testing local friendliness requires a cunning setup involving two superobservers, Alice and Bob (who play the role of Wigner), watching their friends Charlie and Debbie. Alice and Bob each have their own interferometeran apparatus used to manipulate beams of photons. Before being measured, the photons polarizations are in a superposition of being both horizontal and vertical. Pairs of entangled photons are prepared such that if the polarization of one is measured to be horizontal, the polarization of its partner should immediately flip to be vertical. One photon from each entangled pair is sent into Alices interferometer, and its partner is sent to Bobs. Charlie and Debbie are not actually human friends in this test. Rather, they are beam displacers at the front of each interferometer. When Alices photon hits the displacer, its polarization is effectively measured, and it swerves either left or right, depending on the direction of the polarization it snaps into. This action plays the role of Alices friend Charlie measuring the polarization. (Debbie similarly resides in Bobs interferometer.)

Alice then has to make a choice: She can measure the photons new deviated path immediately, which would be the equivalent of opening the lab door and asking Charlie what he saw. Or she can allow the photon to continue on its journey, passing through a second beam displacer that recombines the left and right pathsthe equivalent of keeping the lab door closed. Alice can then directly measure her photons polarization as it exits the interferometer. Throughout the experiment, Alice and Bob independently choose which measurement choices to make and then compare notes to calculate the correlations seen across a series of entangled pairs.

Tischler and her colleagues carried out 90,000 runs of the experiment. As expected, the correlations violated Bells original boundsand crucially, they also violated the new local-friendliness threshold. The team could also modify the setup to tune down the degree of entanglement between the photons by sending one of the pair on a detour before it entered its interferometer, gently perturbing the perfect harmony between the partners. When the researchers ran the experiment with this slightly lower level of entanglement, they found a point where the correlations still violated Bells bound but not local friendliness. This result proved that the two sets of bounds are not equivalent and that the new local-friendliness constraints are stronger, Tischler says. If you violate them, you learn more about reality, she adds. Namely, if your theory says that friends can be treated as quantum systems, then you must either give up locality, accept that measurements do not have a single result that observers must agree on or allow superdeterminism. Each of these options has profoundand, to some physicists, distinctly distastefulimplications.

The paper is an important philosophical study, says Michele Reilly, co-founder of Turing, a quantum-computing company based in New York City, who was not involved in the work. She notes that physicists studying quantum foundations have often struggled to come up with a feasible test to back up their big ideas. I am thrilled to see an experiment behind philosophical studies, Reilly says. Steinberg calls the experiment extremely elegant and praises the team for tackling the mystery of the observers role in measurement head-on.

Although it is no surprise that quantum mechanics forces us to give up a commonsense assumptionphysicists knew that from Bellthe advance here is that we are a narrowing in on which of those assumptions it is, says Wharton, who was also not part of the study. Still, he notes, proponents of most quantum interpretations will not lose any sleep. Fans of retrocausality, such as himself, have already made peace with superdeterminism: in their view, it is not shocking that future measurements affect past results. Meanwhile QBists and many-worlds adherents long ago threw out the requirement that quantum mechanics prescribes a single outcome that every observer must agree on.

And both Bohmian mechanics and spontaneous collapse models already happily ditched locality in response to Bell. Furthermore, collapse models say that a real macroscopic friend cannot be manipulated as a quantum system in the first place.

Vaidman, who was also not involved in the new work, is less enthused by it, however, and criticizes the identification of Wigners friend with a photon. The methods used in the paper are ridiculous; the friend has to be macroscopic, he says. Philosopher of physics Tim Maudlin of New York University, who was not part of the study, agrees. Nobody thinks a photon is an observer, unless you are a panpsychic, he says. Because no physicist questions whether a photon can be put into superposition, Maudlin feels the experiment lacks bite. It rules something outjust something that nobody ever proposed, he says.

Tischler accepts the criticism. We dont want to overclaim what we have done, she says. The key for future experiments will be scaling up the size of the friend, adds team member Howard Wiseman, a physicist at Griffith University. The most dramatic result, he says, would involve using an artificial intelligence, embodied on a quantum computer, as the friend. Some philosophers have mused that such a machine could have humanlike experiences, a position known as the strong AI hypothesis, Wiseman notes, though nobody yet knows whether that idea will turn out to be true. But if the hypothesis holds, this quantum-based artificial general intelligence (AGI) would be microscopic. So from the point of view of spontaneous collapse models, it would not trigger collapse because of its size. If such a test was run, and the local-friendliness bound was not violated, that result would imply that an AGIs consciousness cannot be put into superposition. In turn, that conclusion would suggest that Wigner was right that consciousness causes collapse. I dont think I will live to see an experiment like this, Wiseman says. But that would be revolutionary.

Reilly, however, warns that physicists hoping that future AGI will help them home in on the fundamental description of reality are putting the cart before the horse. Its not inconceivable to me that quantum computers will be the paradigm shift to get to us into AGI, she says. Ultimately, we need a theory of everything in order to build an AGI on a quantum computer, period, full stop.

That requirement may rule out more grandiose plans. But the team also suggests more modest intermediate tests involving machine-learning systems as friends, which appeals to Steinberg. That approach is interesting and provocative, he says. Its becoming conceivable that larger- and larger-scale computational devices could, in fact, be measured in a quantum way.

Renato Renner, a quantum physicist at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich), makes an even stronger claim: regardless of whether future experiments can be carried out, he says, the new theorem tells us that quantum mechanics needs to be replaced. In 2018 Renner and his colleague Daniela Frauchiger, then at ETH Zurich, published a thought experiment based on Wigners friend and used it to derive a new paradox. Their setup differs from that of the Brisbane team but also involves four observers whose measurements can become entangled. Renner and Frauchiger calculated that if the observers apply quantum laws to one another, they can end up inferring different results in the same experiment.

The new paper is another confirmation that we have a problem with current quantum theory, says Renner, who was not involved in the work. He argues that none of todays quantum interpretations can worm their way out of the so-called Frauchiger-Renner paradox without proponents admitting they do not care whether quantum theory gives consistent results. QBists offer the most palatable means of escape, because from the outset, they say that quantum theory cannot be used to infer what other observers will measure, Renner says. It still worries me, though: If everything is just personal to me, how can I say anything relevant to you? he adds. Renner is now working on a new theory that provides a set of mathematical rules that would allow one observer to work out what another should see in a quantum experiment.

Still, those who strongly believe their favorite interpretation is right see little value in Tischlers study. If you think quantum mechanics is unhealthy, and it needs replacing, then this is useful because it tells you new constraints, Vaidman says. But I dont agree that this is the casemany worlds explains everything.

For now, physicists will have to continue to agree to disagree about which interpretation is best or if an entirely new theory is needed. Thats where we left off in the early 20th centurywere genuinely confused about this, Reilly says. But these studies are exactly the right thing to do to think through it.

Disclaimer: The author frequently writes for the Foundational Questions Institute, which sponsors research in physics and cosmologyand partially funded the Brisbane teams study.

See original here:
This Twist on Schrdinger's Cat Paradox Has Major Implications for Quantum Theory - Scientific American

IBM has Joined with the University of Tokyo to Create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium to Accelerate Research and Development – WFMZ…

DUBLIN, Aug. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- ResearchAndMarkets.com published a new article on the quantum computing industry "IBM has Joined with the University of Tokyo to Create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium"

Quantum computing startup Rigetti Computing announced that it has closed a $79 million Series C funding round. The company currently offers cloud based access to its quantum machines. Quantum computers are built around the concept of quantum bits or qbits which give them the potential to be much faster and much more powerful than classical computers. While quantum computers may not yet be ready for real world use cases, the industry has made significant progress in recent years.

Microsoft and ETH Zurich recently developed a quantum algorithm that can simulate catalytic processes extremely quickly which could help to develop an efficient method for carbon fixation. This process reduces carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by turning it into useful compounds. IBM has joined with the University of Tokyo to create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium (QIIC) to accelerate quantum computing research and development in Japan. QIIC members will have cloud access to the IBM Quantum Computation Center as well as access to a dedicated quantum system planned for installation in Japan in 2021.

To see the full article and a list of related reports on the market, visit "IBM has Joined with the University of Tokyo to Create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium"

About ResearchAndMarkets.comResearchAndMarkets.com is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends.

Research and Markets also offers Custom Research services providing focused, comprehensive and tailored research.

Media Contact:

Research and MarketsLaura Wood, Senior Managerpress@researchandmarkets.com

For E.S.T Office Hours Call +1-917-300-0470For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call +1-800-526-8630For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

Go here to read the rest:
IBM has Joined with the University of Tokyo to Create the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium to Accelerate Research and Development - WFMZ...

Quantum Computing gains as it kicks off commercialization phase with its Mukai quantum computing software – Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Set up at the beginning of 2018, Quantum bills itself as the first publicly traded pure-play quantum computing company

QuantumComputing Inc (), an advanced technology company developing quantum-ready applications and tools,said Wednesday that it is set to gain as it has entered the key commercialization phase as the only public pure-play in the quantum computing space.

The Leesburg, Virginia-based company has kicked off the official commercial launch of its Mukai quantum computing software execution platform. Last week, the company introduced a new trial access program that demonstrates Mukais power to solve real-world problems.

Quantums stock recently traded 1.3%higher to $3.91 a share inNew York.

READ:Quantum Computing launches free trial of Mukai quantum computing application platform

According to the company, the trial will enable developers to discover how they can migrate their existing applications to quantum-ready solutions and realize superior performance even when running their solutions on classical Intel or AMD processor-based computers.

The trial is designed to encourage and facilitate quantum application development to solve real world problems at breakthrough speed and not tomorrow, but today, the company said in a statement.

There are only a handful of quantum software experts in the world, and fortunately for us, this includes Mike and Steve," commented Quantum CEO Robert Liscouski. They have been doing an outstanding job building out our software engineering teams, developing our first quantum-ready products, and preparing QCI for commercial success.

Quantum kicked off 2020 with the public release of its first quantum-ready software product, the QCI Quantum Asset Allocator (QAA). This solution is designed to help portfolio managers maximize returns by calculating their optimal asset allocations, said the company.

QAA is the first of a series of Quantum products that will leverage quantum techniques to provide differentiated performance on both classical computers and on a variety of early-stage quantum computers, added the company. Naturally, Quantum is looking to convert its QAA beta users into long-term customers.

The core of our strategy has been to anticipate the direction of the market and be ahead of it by offering unique solutions that establish QCI as a market leader, said Liscouski. We will be driven by the market, but in turn will drive the market by helping our customers realize their quantum-enabled future.

The company said that while quantum computing is typically a high-dollar investment given the "sophisticated and costly hardware," Mukai makes quantum application development affordable and scalable compared to running solutions on intermediate quantum computers, like those offered by D-Wave, Fujitsu, IBM and Rigetti.

Mukai addresses the quantum computing market which is tipped to grow at a 23.2% compound annual growth rate to $9.1 billion by 2030, according to Tractica.

Contact the author Uttara Choudhury at [emailprotected]

Follow her on Twitter: @UttaraProactive

Link:
Quantum Computing gains as it kicks off commercialization phase with its Mukai quantum computing software - Proactive Investors USA & Canada

Topological Quantum Computing Market Growth By Manufacturers, Type And Application, Forecast To 2026 – 3rd Watch News

New Jersey, United States,- Market Research Intellect sheds light on the market scope, potential, and performance perspective of the Global Topological Quantum Computing Market by carrying out an extensive market analysis. Pivotal market aspects like market trends, the shift in customer preferences, fluctuating consumption, cost volatility, the product range available in the market, growth rate, drivers and constraints, financial standing, and challenges existing in the market are comprehensively evaluated to deduce their impact on the growth of the market in the coming years. The report also gives an industry-wide competitive analysis, highlighting the different market segments, individual market share of leading players, and the contemporary market scenario and the most vital elements to study while assessing the global Topological Quantum Computing market.

The research study includes the latest updates about the COVID-19 impact on the Topological Quantum Computing sector. The outbreak has broadly influenced the global economic landscape. The report contains a complete breakdown of the current situation in the ever-evolving business sector and estimates the aftereffects of the outbreak on the overall economy.

Leading Topological Quantum Computing manufacturers/companies operating at both regional and global levels:

To get Incredible Discounts on this Premium Report, Click Here @ https://www.marketresearchintellect.com/ask-for-discount/?rid=174712&utm_source=3WN&utm_medium=888

The Topological Quantum Computing market report provides successfully marked contemplated policy changes, favorable circumstances, industry news, developments, and trends. This information can help readers fortify their market position. It packs various parts of information gathered from secondary sources, including press releases, web, magazines, and journals as numbers, tables, pie-charts, and graphs. The information is verified and validated through primary interviews and questionnaires. The data on growth and trends focuses on new technologies, market capacities, raw materials, CAPEX cycle, and the dynamic structure of the Topological Quantum Computing market.

This study analyzes the growth of Topological Quantum Computing based on the present, past and futuristic data and will render complete information about the Topological Quantum Computing industry to the market-leading industry players that will guide the direction of the Topological Quantum Computing market through the forecast period. All of these players are analyzed in detail so as to get details concerning their recent announcements and partnerships, product/services, and investment strategies, among others.

Sales Forecast:

The report contains historical revenue and volume that backing information about the market capacity, and it helps to evaluate conjecture numbers for key areas in the Topological Quantum Computing market. Additionally, it includes a share of each segment of the Topological Quantum Computing market, giving methodical information about types and applications of the market.

Reasons for Buying Topological Quantum Computing Market Report

This report gives a forward-looking prospect of various factors driving or restraining market growth.

It renders an in-depth analysis for changing competitive dynamics.

It presents a detailed analysis of changing competition dynamics and puts you ahead of competitors.

It gives a six-year forecast evaluated on the basis of how the market is predicted to grow.

It assists in making informed business decisions by performing a pin-point analysis of market segments and by having complete insights of the Topological Quantum Computing market.

This report helps the readers understand key product segments and their future.

Have Any Query? Ask Our Expert @ https://www.marketresearchintellect.com/need-customization/?rid=174712&utm_source=3WN&utm_medium=888

In the end, the Topological Quantum Computing market is analyzed for revenue, sales, price, and gross margin. These points are examined for companies, types, applications, and regions.

To summarize, the global Topological Quantum Computing market report studies the contemporary market to forecast the growth prospects, challenges, opportunities, risks, threats, and the trends observed in the market that can either propel or curtail the growth rate of the industry. The market factors impacting the global sector also include provincial trade policies, international trade disputes, entry barriers, and other regulatory restrictions.

About Us:

Market Research Intellect provides syndicated and customized research reports to clients from various industries and organizations with the aim of delivering functional expertise. We provide reports for all industries including Energy, Technology, Manufacturing and Construction, Chemicals and Materials, Food and Beverage, and more. These reports deliver an in-depth study of the market with industry analysis, the market value for regions and countries, and trends that are pertinent to the industry.

Contact Us:

Mr. Steven Fernandes

Market Research Intellect

New Jersey ( USA )

Tel: +1-650-781-4080

Our Trending Reports

Laser Pointer Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

Music Publishing Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

Storage As A Service Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

Indonesia Marine Lubricants Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

United States & Asia Low Smoke Halogen-Free Cable Materials Market Size, Growth Analysis, Opportunities, Business Outlook and Forecast to 2026

See the rest here:
Topological Quantum Computing Market Growth By Manufacturers, Type And Application, Forecast To 2026 - 3rd Watch News

IQM awarded more than 20M for the development of quantum computers – Help Net Security

IQM Finland Oy (IQM) was awarded a 2.5M grant and up to 15M of equity investment from the EIC Accelerator program for the development of quantum computers, benefiting the industry and the society at large.

Together with Business Finland grants of 3.3M that IQM received so far, the company is on a fast run with more than 20M more raised in less than a year from its 11.4M seed round, summing in total to 32M.

IQM has experienced amazing growth, set up a fully functional research lab in record time, and also hired the largest industrial quantum hardware team in Europe. With the help of this new 20M, IQM will hire one quantum engineer per week and take an important next step to commercialize the technology through co-design of quantum-computing hardware and applications.

Quantum computers will be funded by European governments, supporting IQMs expansion strategy to build quantum computers in Germany, says Dr. Jan Goetz, CEO and co-founder of IQM.

Last week, the Finnish government announced they will support the acquisition of a quantum computer with 20.7M for the Finnish State Research center VTT.

It has been a mind-blowing forty-million past week for quantum computers in Finland. IQM staff is excited to work together with VTT, Aalto University, and CSC in this ecosystem, rejoices Prof. Mikko Mttnen, Chief Scientist and co-founder of IQM.

This announcement was followed by the German government with 2b and to immediately commission the construction of at least two quantum computers. IQM sees this as an ideal point to expand its operations in Germany.

With our growing team in Munich, IQM will build co-design quantum computers for commercial applications and install testing facilities for quantum processors, states Prof. Enrique Solano, CEO of IQM Germany.

Quantum computing will radically transform the lives of billions of people. Applications range from game-changing invention of medicine and novel materials to the discovery of economic models and sustainable processes.

We are witnessing a boost in deep-tech funding in Europe, very important now. For a healthy growth of startups like IQM, we need all three funding channels: (1) research grants to stimulate new key innovations, (2) equity investments to grow the company, (3) early adoption through acquisitions supported by the government. This allows to pool the risk while creating a new industry and business cases, says Dr. Goetz.

IQM is focusing on superconducting quantum processors, which are streamlined for commercial applications in a novel Co-Design approach.

With the new funding and immense support from the Finnish and the European governments, we are ready to scale technologically. This brings us closer to quantum advantage thus providing tangible commercial value in near-term quantum computers, adds Dr. Kuan Yen Tan, CTO and co-founder of IQM.

IQM ranks in the top 2% of all European deep tech startups applying for the highly competitive EIC Accelerator program

Thanks to its strong technology and business plan, IQM was one of the 72 to succeed in the very competitive selection process of the EIC. Altogether 3969 companies applied for this funding.

The 15M equity component of the EIC can be an ideal contribution to IQMs Series A funding round. says a beaming Dr. Juha Vartiainen, COO and co-founder of IQM.

The new funding also supports IQMs recent establishment of its new underground quantum computing infrastructure capable of housing the first European farm of quantum computers.

IQM provides the full hardware stack for a quantum computer, integrating different technologies, and invites collaborations with quantum software companies. Brilliant quantum software engineers are also welcomed to join IQM.

Read the original post:
IQM awarded more than 20M for the development of quantum computers - Help Net Security

Teleportation Is Indeed Possible At Least in the Quantum World – SciTechDaily

Quantum teleportation is an important step in improving quantum computing.

Beam me up is one of the most famous catchphrases from the Star Trek series. It is the command issued when a character wishes to teleport from a remote location back to the Starship Enterprise.

While human teleportation exists only in science fiction, teleportation is possible in the subatomic world of quantum mechanicsalbeit not in the way typically depicted on TV. In the quantum world, teleportation involves the transportation of information, rather than the transportation of matter.

Last year scientists confirmed that information could be passed between photons on computer chips even when the photons were not physically linked.

Now, according to new research from the University of Rochester and Purdue University, teleportation may also be possible between electrons.

A quantum processor semiconductor chip is connected to a circuit board in the lab of John Nichol, an assistant professor of physics at the University of Rochester. Nichol and Andrew Jordan, a professor of physics, are exploring new ways of creating quantum-mechanical interactions between distant electrons, promising major advances in quantum computing. Credit: University of Rochester photo / J. Adam Fenster

In a paper published in Nature Communications and one to appear in Physical Review X, the researchers, including John Nichol, an assistant professor of physics at Rochester, and Andrew Jordan, a professor of physics at Rochester, explore new ways of creating quantum-mechanical interactions between distant electrons. The research is an important step in improving quantum computing, which, in turn, has the potential to revolutionize technology, medicine, and science by providing faster and more efficient processors and sensors.

Quantum teleportation is a demonstration of what Albert Einstein famously called spooky action at a distancealso known as quantum entanglement. In entanglementone of the basic of concepts of quantum physicsthe properties of one particle affect the properties of another, even when the particles are separated by a large distance. Quantum teleportation involves two distant, entangled particles in which the state of a third particle instantly teleports its state to the two entangled particles.

Quantum teleportation is an important means for transmitting information in quantum computing. While a typical computer consists of billions of transistors, called bits, quantum computers encode information in quantum bits, or qubits. A bit has a single binary value, which can be either 0 or 1, but qubits can be both 0 and 1 at the same time. The ability for individual qubits to simultaneously occupy multiple states underlies the great potential power of quantum computers.

Scientists have recently demonstrated quantum teleportation by using electromagnetic photons to create remotely entangled pairs of qubits.

Qubits made from individual electrons, however, are also promising for transmitting information in semiconductors.

Individual electrons are promising qubits because they interact very easily with each other, and individual electron qubits in semiconductors are also scalable, Nichol says. Reliably creating long-distance interactions between electrons is essential for quantum computing.

Creating entangled pairs of electron qubits that span long distances, which is required for teleportation, has proved challenging, though: while photons naturally propagate over long distances, electrons usually are confined to one place.

In order to demonstrate quantum teleportation using electrons, the researchers harnessed a recently developed technique based on the principles of Heisenberg exchange coupling. An individual electron is like a bar magnet with a north pole and a south pole that can point either up or down. The direction of the polewhether the north pole is pointing up or down, for instanceis known as the electrons magnetic moment or quantum spin state. If certain kinds of particles have the same magnetic moment, they cannot be in the same place at the same time. That is, two electrons in the same quantum state cannot sit on top of each other. If they did, their states would swap back and forth in time.

The researchers used the technique to distribute entangled pairs of electrons and teleport their spin states.

We provide evidence for entanglement swapping, in which we create entanglement between two electrons even though the particles never interact, and quantum gate teleportation, a potentially useful technique for quantum computing using teleportation, Nichol says. Our work shows that this can be done even without photons.

The results pave the way for future research on quantum teleportation involving spin states of all matter, not just photons, and provide more evidence for the surprisingly useful capabilities of individual electrons in qubit semiconductors.

References:

Conditional teleportation of quantum-dot spin states by Haifeng Qiao, Yadav P. Kandel, Sreenath K. Manikandan, Andrew N. Jordan, Saeed Fallahi, Geoffrey C. Gardner, Michael J. Manfra and John M. Nichol, 15 June 2020, Nature Communications.DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16745-0

Coherent multi-spin exchange in a quantum-dot spin chain by Haifeng Qiao, Yadav P. Kandel, Kuangyin Deng, Saeed Fallahi, Geoffrey C. Gardner, Michael J. Manfra, Edwin Barnes, John M. Nichol, Accepted 12 May 2020, Physical Review X.arXiv: 2001.02277

Continue reading here:
Teleportation Is Indeed Possible At Least in the Quantum World - SciTechDaily

Major South Korean Daegu Bank and SK Telecom, the Nations Largest Wireless Carrier, are Working on 5G enabled Quantum Cryptography Tech – Crowdfund…

South Korea-based DGB Daegu Bank, which is part of the DGB Financial Group (DGBFG), a banking holding company based in Daegu, has partnered with SK Telecom, a South Korean wireless telecommunications operator.

Through the partnership, both organizations aim to enhance Daegu Banks IM Bank apps security by using 5G enabled quantum cryptography technology.

SK Telecom is a key part of the SK Group, which is one of the nations largest chaebols (a large conglomerate thats controlled by an owner or family based in South Korea). SK Telecom is the countrys largest wireless carrier. The company notably leads the domestic market with around a 50% share. Meanwhile, Daegu Bank is one of the largest regional banks in South Korea. It mainly services customers based in the Daegu-Gyeongbuk region.

The IM Bank app will reportedly allow Samsung Galaxy A Quantum owners to use the handsets quantum random number generator (QRNG) for enabling greater security. The QRNG chipset that has been embedded in the Galaxy A Quantum mobile phones is able to generate true random numbers that are not predictable, according to SK Telecom.

The technology will be used to generate one-time passwords at the time when IM Bank clients are sending funds or creating accounts. SK Telekom and Daegu Bank said theyll be looking into other use cases for the technology.

Quantum tech has also been used by many other financial service providers. As reported, the BBVA continues to work on quantum computing data projects. Last month, the BBVA had shared results of its quantum computing tech proof of concepts for improving currency aribtrage and enhancing porfolio management.

Crypto or blockchain industry participants have also raised concerns about whether the binary model based digital currencies of today, like Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), will be ready for the time when quantum computers have matured.

Ethereum (ETH) might not even have quantum resistance on its roadmap, the Quantum Resistant Ledger (QRL) team revealed in June 2020.

See the rest here:
Major South Korean Daegu Bank and SK Telecom, the Nations Largest Wireless Carrier, are Working on 5G enabled Quantum Cryptography Tech - Crowdfund...