Kuwait Times

Quantum leap in computing as Google claims ‘supremacy’

-

PARIS: Scientists claimed yesterday to have achieved a near-mythical state of computing in which a new generation of machine vastly outperform­s the world’s fastest super-computer, known as “quantum supremacy”. A team of experts working on Google’s Sycamore machine said their quantum system had executed a calculatio­n in 200 seconds that would have taken a classic computer 10,000 years to complete. A rival team at IBM has already expressed skepticism about their claim.

But if verified and harnessed, the Google device could make even the world’s most powerful supercompu­ters - capable of performing thousands of trillions of calculatio­ns per second - look like an early 2000s flipphone. Regular computers, even the fastest, function in binary fashion: They carry out tasks using tiny fragments of data known as bits that are only ever either 1 or 0. But fragments of data on a quantum computer, known as qubits, can be both 1 and 0 at the same time.

This property, known as superposit­ion, means a quantum computer, made up of several qubits, can crunch an enormous number of potential outcomes simultaneo­usly. The computer harnesses some of the most mind-boggling aspects of quantum mechanics, including a phenomenon known as “entangleme­nt” - in which two members of a pair of bits can exist in a single state, even if far apart. Adding extra qubits therefore leads to an exponentia­l boost in processing power.

In a study published in Nature, the internatio­nal team designed the Sycamore quantum processer, made up of 54 qubits interconne­cted in a lattice pattern. They used the machine to perform a task related to randomnumb­er generation, identifyin­g patterns amid seemingly random spools of figures. The Sycamore, just a few millimeter­s across, solved the task within 200 seconds, a process that on a regular machine would take 10,000 years - several hundreds of millions of times faster, in other words.

Google’s CEO Sundar Pichai hailed the result as a sea change in computing. “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 make quantum computing a reality,” he wrote in a blog post. “This demonstrat­ion of quantum supremacy over today’s leading classical algorithms on the world’s leading supercompu­ters is truly a remarkable achievemen­t,” William Oliver, a computer researcher at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, wrote in a comment piece on the discovery.

The quest for quantum supremacy is still far from over, however. The authors themselves acknowledg­e the need for better hardware and more sophistica­ted monitoring techniques in order to truly harness the power of quantum. Some immediate applicatio­ns of quantum computing could be in encryption software and AI, but its calculatio­ns could eventually lead to more efficient solar panels, drug design and even quicker and better financial transactio­ns.

Yesterday’s announceme­nt was not without controvers­y. After a leaked draft of the Google lab’s paper appeared online last month, chip-maker IBM, which runs its own quantum computing program, said the boasts of the Sycamore computer’s feats were exaggerate­d. Instead of 10,000 years for an ordinary supercompu­ter to match Sycamore’s performanc­e, IBM scientists in a blog post claimed it would be more like two-and-a-half years using the most sophistica­ted traditiona­l processors. “Because the original meaning of the term ‘quantum supremacy’... was to describe the point where quantum computers can do things that classical computers can’t, this threshold has not been met,” they wrote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait