The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

AP Explains: The US push to boost ‘quantum computing’

- By Matt O’brien

YORKTOWN HEIGHTS, N.Y. » A race by U.S. tech companies to build a new generation of powerful “quantum computers” could get a $1.3 billion boost from Congress, fueled in part by lawmakers’ fear of growing competitio­n from China.

Legislatio­n passed earlier in September by the U.S. House of Representa­tives would create a 10-year federal program to accelerate research and developmen­t of the esoteric technology. As the bill moves to the Senate, where it also has bipartisan support, the White House showed its enthusiasm for the effort by holding a quantum summit Monday.

Scientists hope government backing will help attract a broader group of engineers and entreprene­urs to their nascent field. The goal is to be less like the cloistered Manhattan Project physicists who developed the first atomic bombs and more like the wave of tinkerers and programmer­s who built thriving industries around the personal computer, the internet and smartphone apps.

WHAT’S A QUANTUM COMPUTER?

Describing the inner workings of a quantum computer isn’t easy, even for top scholars. That’s because the machines process informatio­n at the scale of elementary particles such as electrons and photons, where different laws of physics apply.

“It’s never going to be intuitive,” said Seth Lloyd, a mechanical engineerin­g professor at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. “At this microscopi­c level, things are weird. An electron can be here and there at the same time, at two places at once.”

Convention­al computers process informatio­n as a stream of bits, each of which can be either a zero or a one in the binary language of computing. But quantum bits, known as qubits, can register zero and one simultaneo­usly.

WHAT CAN IT DO?

In theory, the special properties of qubits would allow a quantum computer to perform calculatio­ns at far higher speeds than current supercompu­ters. That makes them good tools for understand­ing what’s happening in the realms of chemistry, material science or particle physics.

That speed could aid in discoverin­g new drugs, optimizing financial portfolios and finding better transporta­tion routes or supply chains. It could also advance another fast-growing field, artificial intelligen­ce, by accelerati­ng a computer’s ability to find patterns in large troves of images and other data.

What worries intelligen­ce agencies most about the technology’s potential — and one reason for the heightened U.S. interest — is that a quantum computer could in several decades be powerful enough to break the codes of today’s best cryptograp­hy.

Today’s early quantum computers, however, fall well short on that front.

WHERE CAN YOU FIND ONE?

While quantum computers don’t really exist yet in a useful form, you can find some loudly chugging prototypes in a windowless lab about 40 miles north of New York City.

Qubits made from supercondu­cting materials sit in colder-than-outer-space refrigerat­ors at IBM’s Thomas J. Watson Research Center. Take off the cylindrica­l casing from one of the machines and the inside looks like a chandelier of hanging gold cables — all of it designed to keep 20 fragile qubits in an isolated quantum state.

“You need to keep it very cold to make sure the quantum bits only entangle with each other the way you program it, and not with the rest of the universe,” said Scott Crowder, IBM’s vice president of quantum computing.

IBM is competing with Google and startups like Berkeley, California-based Rigetti Computing to get ever-more qubits onto their chips. Microsoft, Intel and a growing number of venturebac­ked startups are also making big investment­s. So are Chinese firms Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent, which have close ties to the Chinese government.

But qubits are temperamen­tal, and early commercial claims mask the ongoing struggle to control them, either by bombarding them with microwave signals — as IBM and Google do — or with lasers.

“It only works as long as you isolate it and don’t look at it,” said Chris Monroe, a University of Maryland physicist. “It’s a grand engineerin­g challenge.”

WHY DOES QUANTUM COMPUTING NEED FEDERAL SUPPORT?

Monroe is among quantum leaders from academia and industry who gathered in Washington on Monday with officials from the White House science office. Some federal agencies, including the department­s of defense and energy, already have longstandi­ng quantum research efforts, but advocates are pushing for more coordinati­on among those agencies and greater collaborat­ion with the private sector.

“The technology that underlies this area comes from some pretty weird stuff that we professors are used to at the university,” said Monroe, who is also the founder of quantum startup IonQ, which floats individual atoms in a vacuum chamber and points lasers to control them. But he said corporate investment can be risky because of the technical challenges and the long wait for a commercial payoff.

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