A new microchip-sized device could dramatically accelerate the future of quantum computing. It controls laser frequencies with extreme precision while using far less power than today’s bulky systems.
Morning Overview on MSN
A dust-sized device could supercharge quantum computers
A device smaller than a grain of dust is emerging as a surprisingly powerful candidate to reshape how quantum computers are ...
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Can fingernail-sized chips help America catch China in the race to quantum computing supremacy?
SEEQC, which traces its lineage back to IBM, is building the world’s quantum computers. They might prove critical in the ...
Quantum Art's new QPU could be both significantly smaller and also faster than competing quantum architectures. How can we reinvent quantum computing? Perhaps by shrinking it down and making it small: ...
The encryption protecting billions of dollars, which experts once called unbreakable, no longer works. Hackers don’t need passwords. They don’t brute-force keys. They simply walk through digital ...
In a major step toward practical quantum computers, Princeton engineers have built a superconducting qubit that lasts three times longer than today’s best versions. “The real challenge, the thing that ...
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