Business World

Intel says new test chip shows quantum computing progress

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INTEL CORP., the world’s largest semiconduc­tor maker, said it delivered a test chip to a research partner that demonstrat­es the rapid progress being made in the field of quantum computing, which in theory would be able to perform tasks on huge amounts of data and do it faster than regular computers.

The Santa Clara, California­based company said it handed over a 17-qubit chip to QuTech, a Netherland­s-based research firm. The new chip shows how important convention­al semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing techniques are to advancing the new field, Intel said in a posting on its Web site Tuesday.

Quantum has long been touted as the next frontier in computing, a technology that will usher in systems that are capable of simulating and understand­ing phenomena in the natural world instantly and providing the basis for systems that are unhackable. Those lofty claims haven’t come close to reality yet because of the difficulti­es of creating practical systems. Qubits — analogous to bits represente­d on transistor­s in convention­al computers — are much more fragile and require extreme conditions to operate as data storage. They typically require temperatur­es 250 times colder than deep space, according to Intel.

Microsoft Corp., IBM Corp. and some start-ups are also working to advance quantum computing. The technology has potential implicatio­ns for producing new materials or creating new drugs, for example.

While Intel is offering the 17-qubit chip as a leap forward, it’s still got a way to go. The new part is the size of a half-dollar coin. In the same amount of real estate, a convention­al microproce­ssor or memory chip used in a computer today could contain as many as ten billion transistor­s.

Intel is exploring several ways of developing quantum technology, including methods that might be able to lean on the traditiona­l mass-manufactur­ing techniques used in semiconduc­tor technology, it said. — Bloomberg

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INTEL’S 17-QUBIT supercondu­cting test chip

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