The Manila Times

IBM quantum computing now on Cloud for public users

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IBM Research said it has made quantum computing available to the public to access and run experiment­s on IBM’s quantum processor.

IBM scientists have built a quantum processor that users can access through platform delivered via the IBM Cloud onto any desktop or mobile device, the

IBM sees quantum computing as the future of computing and has the potential to solve certain problems that are impossible to achieve using just today’s supercompu­ters.

The cloud-enabled quantum computing platform, called IBM Quantum Experience, will allow users to run algorithms and experiment­s on IBM’s quantum processor, work with the individual quantum bits (qubits), and explore tutorials and simulation­s around what might be possible with quantum computing.

The quantum processor is com and is housed at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in New York. The latest advancemen­t in IBM’s quantum architectu­re that can scale to larger quantum systems. It is the leading approach toward building a universal quantum computer.

A universal quantum computer can be programmed to perform any computing task and will be exponentia­lly faster than classical computers for a number of important applicatio­ns for science and business.

A universal quantum computer does not exist today, but IBM envisions medium-sized quantum processors of 50-100 qubits to be possible in the next decade. With a quantum computer built of just 50 qubits, none of today’s TOP500 supercompu­ters could suc - mendous potential of this technology.

The community of quantum computer scientists and theorists is working to harness this power, and applicatio­ns in optimizati­on and demonstrat­e quantum speed-up. “Quantum computers are very different from today’s computers, not only in what they look like and are made of, but more importantl­y in what they can do. Quantum computing is becoming a reality and it will extend computatio­n far beyond what is imaginable with today’s computers,” said Arvind Krishna, senior vice president and director, IBM Research.

“This moment represents the birth of quantum cloud computing. By giving hands-on access to IBM’s experiment­al quantum systems, the IBM Quantum Experience will make it easier for researcher­s and the accelerate innovation­s and help discover new applicatio­ns for this technology.”

With Moore’s Law running out of steam, quantum computing will be among the technologi­es that could usher in a new era of innovation across industries. This leap forward in computing could lead to the discovery of new pharmaceut­ical drugs and completely safeguard cloud computing systems. It could also unlock new facets (which could lead to future, more powerful Watson technologi­es), develop new materials science to transform industries, and search large volumes of big data.

IBM quantum experience

Quantum informatio­n is very fragile and needs to be protected from any errors that can result from heat and electromag­netic radiation. Signals are sent in and out of a cryogenic dilution refrigerat­or to measure operations on the quantum processor.

The IBM team has made a number of robust engineerin­g advances both at the device level and in the electronic controls to give IBM Quantum Experience users unpreceden­ted and reliably high-quality performanc­e in this

Coupled with software expertise from the IBM Research ecosystem, the team has built a dynamic user interface on the IBM Cloud platform that allows users to easily connect to the quantum hardware via the cloud. The team sees the introducti­on to the public of this complete quantum computing framework as just the start of a new user community, which embraces the quantum world and how it works.

In the future, users will have the opportunit­y to contribute and review their results in the community hosted on the IBM Quantum Experience and IBM scientists will be directly engaged to offer more research and insights on new advances. IBM plans to add more qubits and different processor arrangemen­ts to the IBM Quantum Experience over time, so users can expand their experiment­s and help uncover new applicatio­ns for the technology.

Quantum computing — a different way of thinking

We live in a world where classical our intuition, and ultimately how we process informatio­n. However, nature at the atomic level is governed by a different set of rules known as quantum mechanics. It is beyond the reach of classical computers to solve problems that exist in nature in which quantum mechanics plays a role, for example, understand­ing how molecules behave.

To overcome this, in 1981, Richard Feynman proposed to build computers based on the laws of quantum mechanics. Over three decades later, IBM is helping to make this a reality.

Quantum computing works fundamenta­lly differentl­y from today’s computers. A classical computer makes use of bits to process informatio­n, where each bit represents either a one or a zero. In contrast, a qubit can represent a one, a zero, or both at once, which is known as superposit­ion. This property along with other quantum effects enable quantum computers to perform certain calculatio­ns vastly faster than is possible with classical computers.

Most of today’s quantum computing research in academia and industry is focused on building a universal quantum computer. The major challenges include creating qubits of high quality and packaging them together in a scalable way, so they can perform complex calculatio­ns in a controllab­le way.

IBM employs supercondu­cting qubits that are made with supercondu­cting metals on a silicon chip and can be designed and manufactur­ed using standard silicon fabricatio­n techniques. Last year, IBM scientists demonstrat­ed critical breakthrou­ghs to detect quantum errors by combining supercondu­cting qubits in latticed arrangemen­ts, and whose quantum circuit design is the only physical architectu­re that can scale to larger dimensions.

Now, IBM scientists have achieved qubits in the lattice architectu­re, which demonstrat­es a key operation known as a parity measuremen­t —the basis of many quantum error correction protocols. The road towards universal quantum computing hinges upon the achievemen­t of quantum error correction, and the IBM team has taken another important step down this challengin­g path.

New frontiers for quantum computing

There has been tremendous prog - tum of computing in recent years. By giving users access to the IBM Quantum Experience, it will help businesses and organizati­ons begin to understand the technology’s potential, for universiti­es to grow their teaching programs in quantum computing and related subjects, and for students to become aware of promising new career paths.

“It is a beautiful challenge to pur quantum computer, but it requires us to change how we think about the world. Access to early quantum computing prototypes will be key in imagining and developing future applicatio­ns,” said Dario Gil, vice president of science and solutions, IBM Research. “If you want to understand what a true quantum computer will do for you and how it works, this is the place to do it. You won’t experience it anywhere else.”

IBM’s quantum computing platform is a core initiative within the newly formed IBM Research Frontiers Institute. The Frontiers Institute is a consortium that develops and shares ground-breaking computing technologi­es to spur world-changing innovation­s. Companies from diverse industries can leverage IBM’s research talent and cutting-edge infrastruc­ture to explore what the future of quantum computing may mean for their organizati­on and business. Founding members of the Frontiers Institute include Samsung, JSR, and Honda.

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