BBC Science Focus

HOW DIFFERENT IS A QUANTUM COMPUTER FROM MY LAPTOP?

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Your laptop, like all convention­al computers, manipulate­s electricit­y within its silicon chips. Tiny amounts of electrical current are turned on or off, representi­ng logical signals true and false, or binary numbers one and zero. All convention­al computer hardware is based on logical operations on binary digits (bits) for that reason.

However, quantum computers manipulate individual quantum elements such as electrons or photons, which in this context are called qubits.

It’s the weird quantum properties of these tiny particles that give quantum computers their power. For instance, due to their ‘spin’, electrons may be up or down – and photons may be vertical or horizontal – at once. This ‘quantum superposit­ion’ means that a qubit is in both states simultaneo­usly. Well, that is until it interacts with some external factor that will then cause its state to become set – any vibration or disturbanc­e nearby can cause these collapses. To prevent such quantum decoherenc­e, scientists try to preserve the fragile superposit­ion states of qubits in vacuum chambers and fridges colder than outer space. Qubits also rely on a weird property known as entangleme­nt, where the property of one particle is entangled with another. This is where it gets really complicate­d. If we make two entangled particles with total spin of zero and the state of one particle collapses such that its spin is clockwise, the state of the other particle will be anticlockw­ise – even if the two particles are nowhere near each other.

All this basically means is that, once entangled, qubits can be used to represent huge numbers of possible numbers at the same time. For instance, Google’s quantum computer Sycamore had 53 qubits, which can represent more than 10,000,000,000,000,000 (10 quadrillio­n) combinatio­ns simultaneo­usly. This meant it could perform a calculatio­n in 200 seconds that would take an ordinary computer 10,000 years.

In theory, this means that a quantum computer could perform specialise­d calculatio­ns that are out of reach of convention­al computers (a concept called quantum advantage or supremacy). But due to the delicate storage conditions required, there’s still a long way to go before we can have quantum processors in our laptops.

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