News

Japan's first entirely homegrown quantum computer uses superconducting qubits and components made entirely domestically.
The record-breaking achievement could lead to practical, utility-scale quantum computers that are both smaller and faster.
A quantum computer that uses particles of light took about two dozen microseconds to complete a calculation that may take ...
To build a large-scale quantum computer that works, scientists and engineers need to overcome the spontaneous errors that ...
Quantum programs typically execute via a predictable pattern of qubits. HyperQ determines the optimum time slots for each user request and allocates resources across both time and space by determining ...
"Seemingly," there is a 20% chance of quantum computers breaking modern cryptography before the end of 2030, Buterin warned. He made the observation during an online exchange with Ian Miers, Assistant ...
Aaron Lauda has been exploring an area of mathematics that most physicists have seen little use for, wondering if it might have practical applications. In a twist even he didn’t expect, it turns out ...
Scientists may have uncovered the missing piece of quantum computing by reviving a particle once dismissed as useless. This particle, called the neglecton, could give fragile quantum systems the full ...
By entangling vibrations within a single atom, scientists have realized a long-theorized quantum code that could make ...
Scientists from Sweden and Finland have discovered a way to use magnetism to protect fragile qubits, potentially solving ...