Quantum computers—devices that process information using quantum mechanical effects—have long been expected to outperform ...
The collaboration of TU Wien with research groups in China has resulted in a crucial building block for a new kind of quantum ...
An “echo” that arrives before you finish speaking sounds like a glitch. In quantum hardware, that kind of self-interference ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Linked by entanglement, small telescopes may see like one colossal mirror
Space rarely gives up its secrets easily. For instance, what looks like a single ...
Researchers have controlled a temporary stable phase in the system, offering a possible avenue for preserving quantum ...
Researchers have demonstrated a new way to read Majorana qubits, highly stable but notoriously difficult-to-measure quantum ...
It feels so obvious that time moves forward that questioning it can seem almost pointless.
Duke Quantum Center researchers use a neutral-atom platform to simulate unusual localization effects that could underpin robust quantum information storage.
In the pursuit of powerful and stable quantum computers, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have developed the theory for an ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Quantum reservoir computing hits its peak at the brink of many body chaos
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have identified a precise sweet spot where quantum reservoir computing, a machine learning approach that treats quantum systems as computational engines, reaches ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Chinese researchers’ 78-qubit processor slows quantum chaos to delay information loss
Scientists at the Institute of Physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences have directly ...
Henry Yuen is developing a new mathematical language to describe problems whose inputs and outputs aren’t ordinary numbers.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results