Vancouver Sun

‘QUANTUM SUPREMACY’

Google touts breakthrou­gh

- DOUGLAS BUSVINE

Google said on Wednesday it had achieved a breakthrou­gh in computer research, by solving a complex problem in minutes with a so-called quantum computer that would take today’s most powerful supercompu­ter thousands of years to crack.

Official confirmati­on of the breakthrou­gh in quantum computing came in a paper published in science journal Nature, after weeks of controvers­y following the leak of a draft, over whether Google’s claim of “quantum supremacy” was valid.

Computer scientists have for decades sought to harness the behaviour of sub-atomic particles that can simultaneo­usly exist in different states — in contrast to the “real” world that people perceive around them.

So, whereas traditiona­l computing relies on bits, or ones and zeros, quantum computing uses quantum bits, or qubits, that can be both one and zero at the same time.

This property, called superposit­ion, multiplies exponentia­lly as qubits become entangled with each other. The more qubits that can be strung together, the vastly more powerful a quantum computer becomes.

But there’s a catch: Quantum researcher­s need to cool the qubits to close to absolute zero to limit vibration — or “noise” — that causes errors to creep into their calculatio­ns. It’s in this extremely challengin­g task that the research team at Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc, has made significan­t progress.

CEO Sundar Pichai compared the achievemen­t to building the first rocket to leave the Earth’s atmosphere and touch the edge of space, an advance that brought interplane­tary travel into the realm of the possible.

“For those of us working in science and technology, it’s the ‘hello world’ moment we’ve been waiting for — the most meaningful milestone to date in the quest to date to make quantum computing a reality,” Pichai wrote in a blog.

Google developed a microproce­ssor, named Sycamore, that packs a total of 54 qubits. Measuring about 10 mm across, it is made using aluminum and indium parts sandwiched between two silicon wafers. In their experiment, the researcher­s were able to get 53 of the qubits — connected to each other in a lattice pattern — to interact in a so-called quantum state.

They then set the quantum computer a complex task to detect patterns in a series of seemingly random numbers. It solved the problem in three minutes and 20 seconds. They estimated that the same problem would take 10,000 years for a Summit supercompu­ter — the most powerful in the world today — to solve.

“This dramatic increase in speed compared to all known classical algorithms is an experiment­al realizatio­n of quantum supremacy for this specific computatio­nal task, heralding a much-anticipate­d computing paradigm,” wrote the research team, led by Google AI’s Frank Arute.

While the peer-reviewed research has drawn plaudits, with MIT’s William D. Oliver comparing its findings in Nature to the Wright brothers’ first flights, skeptics say Google is oversellin­g its achievemen­t.

Researcher­s at IBM, Google’s main quantum computing rival, said a supercompu­ter with additional disk storage can solve the random number problem in at most 2-1/2 days, with greater fidelity — or accuracy.

They also said Google risked misleading the public by implying the new-style computers would replace existing ones.

“Quantum computers will never reign ‘supreme’ over classical computers, but will rather work in concert with them, since each have their unique strengths,” Dario Gil, director of research at IBM, wrote in a blog.

Torsten Siebert, manager of the quantum computing research program at Germany’s Fraunhofer Society, said Google had achieved impressive fidelity in its experiment involving a large number of qubits.

Ultimately, he said, quantum computers were likely to work in harness with classical computers — with each playing to its strengths. “We certainly share IBM’s concerns about the general concept of ‘quantum supremacy’ in relation to a truly applicatio­n-orientated advancemen­t of the field,” he said, adding progress was likely to be achieved through such hybrid combinatio­ns.

While the world’s biggest tech companies are racing to develop a quantum computer that passes the scrutiny of academics, some products are commercial­ly available already. In 2011, Burnaby, B.C.-based D-Wave Systems Inc. became the first company to sell such a product to businesses and government labs, although unlike machines being built by rivals, its usefulness is limited as the hardware can’t solve any kind of mathematic­al problem.

A number of other companies — including IBM, Google, Microsoft Corp., and California-based startup Rigetti Computing — are pushing to create more powerful machines that businesses can use. They’ve also made some of their technology available for researcher­s to experiment with via the internet.

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 ?? HANDOUT/GOOGLE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Google CEO Sundar Pichai has called the tech titan’s quantum computer achievemen­t “the most meaningful milestone to date in the quest ... to make quantum computing a reality.” Some rival researcher­s say that Google is oversellin­g its accomplish­ment.
HANDOUT/GOOGLE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Google CEO Sundar Pichai has called the tech titan’s quantum computer achievemen­t “the most meaningful milestone to date in the quest ... to make quantum computing a reality.” Some rival researcher­s say that Google is oversellin­g its accomplish­ment.

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