All posts tagged: quantum computers

Scientists solve difficult quantum problem using ordinary computers

Scientists solve difficult quantum problem using ordinary computers

Quantum computing’s edge looked closer after a hard physics problem seemed beyond classical machines. But a new result shows compressed math and smarter algorithms can match or beat that benchmark, raising fresh questions about where true quantum advantage really begins. For years, quantum computers have carried a bold promise. They could solve problems so complex that even the world’s best classical computers would fail. That promise fueled a global race among scientists and technology companies to prove “quantum advantage,” the point where quantum machines outperform traditional computing systems. Now, physicists at the Center for Computational Quantum Physics at the Simons Foundation’s Flatiron Institute and collaborators at Boston University have shaken that narrative. Using advanced mathematics, tensor networks and clever coding, the team solved a difficult quantum physics problem that another group had claimed only a quantum computer could handle. The breakthrough shows that classical computers may still have far more power than many researchers expected. In fact, some of the calculations were completed on a personal laptop. “Whenever we see these kinds of claims, we’re …

Oxford scientists achieve quantum gate teleportation between two quantum supercomputers

Oxford scientists achieve quantum gate teleportation between two quantum supercomputers

Light crossed the gap between two machines in an Oxford laboratory, and with it came a result that pushes quantum computing into new territory. Researchers built a system in which two separate quantum computers worked together as a single device, even though the modules sat about two meters apart. They did not rely on a direct wired transfer of quantum information. Instead, the machines shared it through photons, using a method known as quantum gate teleportation. That distinction matters. For years, one of the biggest problems in quantum computing has been scale. It is hard enough to control a small number of qubits, the quantum version of bits. Trying to pack huge numbers of them into one processor only makes the system more fragile, more noisy, and harder to run accurately. The Oxford team took a different route. Rather than chase one giant machine, they linked smaller modules that could cooperate. In effect, they showed that quantum computing may grow the way some classical supercomputers did, by connecting smaller units that act together. Quantum entanglement: …