Business Standard

Australia researcher­s find a new way to make quantum computers

- JEREMYWAGS­TAFF REUTERS

Researcher­s in Australia have found a new way to build quantum computers which they say would make them dramatical­ly easier and cheaper to produce at scale.

Quantum computers promise to harness the strange ability of subatomic particles to exist in more than one state at a time to solve problems that are too complex or time-consuming for existing computers.

Google, IBM and other technology companies are all developing quantum computers, using a range of approaches.

The team from the University of New South Wales say they have invented a new chip design based on a new type of quantum bit, the basic unit of informatio­n in a quantum computer, known as a qubit.

The new design would allow for a silicon quantum processor to overcome two limitation­s of existing designs: the need for atoms to be placed precisely, and allowing them to be placed further apart and still be coupled. Crucially, says project leader Andrea Mello, this so-called "flip-flop qubit" means the chips can be produced using the same device technology as existing computer chips. "This makes the building of a quantum computer much more feasible, since it is based on the same manufactur­ing technology as today's computer industry," Mello said.

That would allow chips for quantum computers to be mass-manufactur­ed, a goal that has so far eluded other researcher­s.

IBM's quantum computer in the United States has 16 qubits, meaning it can only perform basic calculatio­ns. Google's computer has nine qubits.

A desktop computer runs at gigaflops. The world’s fastest supercompu­ter, China’s Sunway TaihuLight, runs at 93 petaflops, but relies on 10 million processing cores and uses massive amounts of energy.

In theory, even a small 30-qubit universal quantum computer could run at the equivalent of a classic computer operating at 10 teraflops.

The researcher­s' paper will be published in Nature Communicat­ions.

Laszlo Kish, a professor at Texas A&M University, said it was too early to say if the research was a breakthrou­gh "but it may be a step in the proper direction" in solving some of the key obstacles to quantum computing.

 ??  ?? Dr Guilherme Tosi ( left) and Professor Andrea Morello at the UNSW quantum computing labs
Dr Guilherme Tosi ( left) and Professor Andrea Morello at the UNSW quantum computing labs

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