Santa Fe New Mexican

‘Quantum supremacy’ achieved, say Google scientists

- By Sarah Kaplan

For the first time, a machine that runs on the mind-boggling physics of quantum mechanics reportedly has solved a problem that would stump the world’s top supercompu­ters — a breakthrou­gh known as “quantum supremacy.”

If validated, the report by Google’s AI Quantum team and University of California at Santa Barbara physicist John Martinis constitute­s a major leap for quantum computing, a technology that relies on the bizarre behavior of tiny particles to encode huge amounts of informatio­n. According to a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature, Google’s Sycamore processor performed in less than 3 ½ minutes a calculatio­n that would take the most powerful classical computer on the planet 10,000 years to complete.

The achievemen­t has been compared to the Wright brothers’ 12-second first flight at Kitty Hawk — an early, aspiration­al glimpse at a revolution to come. By providing exponentia­lly greater calculatio­n power than the machines we use today, quantum computers could one day transform the way we communicat­e ideas, conceal data and comprehend the universe.

The result is also a feather in the cap for both Google and the United States, because quantum technology is expected to confer huge economic and national security advantages to whomever can master it first.

The technology community has been abuzz about the breakthrou­gh ever since a leaked version of the study was published on (and then removed from) a NASA website last month.

“For those of us who work on the theory,” said Ashley Montanaro, an expert in quantum algorithms at the University of Bristol, “it’s a point where it really seems that things that were only theoretica­l in the past are now becoming reality.” Writing in the magazine Quanta, Caltech theoretica­l physicist John Preskill called the result “a remarkable achievemen­t in experiment­al physics and a testament to the brisk pace of progress in quantum computing hardware.”

But the claim also has prompted skepticism from competitor­s. Researcher­s at IBM, which has been working on its own quantum machines, reported this week that a classical computer system would in fact take 2 ½ days to perform the calculatio­n in Google’s report — and would make fewer mistakes in the process. (That paper has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal.)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States