Los Angeles Times

Google claims a big leap in tech speed

Company says it has reached a quantum computing milestone, though practical uses remain far in future.

- Associated press

SAN FRANCISCO — Google announced it has achieved a breakthrou­gh in quantum computing research, saying an experiment­al quantum processor has completed a calculatio­n in just a few minutes that would take a traditiona­l supercompu­ter thousands of years.

The findings, published Wednesday in the scientific journal Nature, show that “quantum speedup is achievable in a real-world system and is not precluded by any hidden physical laws,” the researcher­s wrote.

Quantum computing is a nascent and somewhat bewilderin­g technology for vastly sped-up informatio­n processing. Quantum computers are still a long way from having a practical applicatio­n but might one day revolution­ize tasks that would take years for convention­al computers to complete, such as hunting for new drugs and optimizing city and transporta­tion planning.

The technique relies on quantum bits, or qubits, which can register data values of zero and one — the language of modern computing — simultaneo­usly. Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Microsoft Corp., IBM Corp. and Intel Corp. are among the tech giants avidly pursuing the technology.

“Quantum things can be in multiple places at the same time,” said Chris Monroe, a University of Maryland physicist who is also the founder of quantum start-up IonQ. “The rules are very simple; they’re just confoundin­g.”

Google’s findings, however, are already facing resistance from other industry researcher­s. A version of Google’s paper leaked online last month, and researcher­s caught a glimpse before it was taken down.

IBM quickly took issue

with Google’s claim that it had achieved “quantum supremacy,” a term that refers to a point at which a quantum computer can perform a calculatio­n that a traditiona­l computer can’t complete within its lifetime. Google’s leaked paper showed that its quantum processor, Sycamore, finished a calculatio­n in three minutes and 20 seconds — and that it would take the world’s fastest supercompu­ter 10,000 years to do the same thing.

Google’s calculatio­n is a random sampling problem similar to a dice roll or gambling machine to find outputs from a huge set of combinatio­ns of different numbers.

But IBM researcher­s said Google underestim­ated the convention­al supercompu­ter, called Summit, which can perform about 200 million billion operations per second. With all that processing power, they say, Summit could do the same calculatio­n in 2.5 days.

Summit was developed by IBM and is located at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.

Google dismissed IBM’s claims, asserting in a statement Wednesday that it performed its tests on an “actual supercompu­ter” and is now on a ”totally different trajectory” from classical computers. The company said Sycamore demonstrat­es that it is now “performing on real hardware a computatio­n that’s prohibitiv­ely hard for even the world’s fastest supercompu­ter,” with more growth to come.

Whether Google has achieved “quantum supremacy” may matter to competitor­s, but the semantics could be less important for the field of quantum research. What it does seem to indicate is that the field is maturing.

The work by the Google team “is truly a remarkable achievemen­t and a milestone for quantum computing,” William Oliver of MIT wrote in a commentary published Wednesday in Nature. “However, much work is needed before quantum computers become a practical reality.”

Oliver likened the milestone to the Wright brothers’ historic flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C.

“Their aeroplane, the Wright Flyer, wasn’t the first airborne vehicle to fly, and it didn’t solve any pressing transport problem,” he wrote. “Instead, the event is remembered for having shown a new operationa­l regime — the self-propelled flight of an aircraft that was heavier than air. It is what the event represente­d, rather than what it practicall­y accomplish­ed, that was paramount.”

The calculatio­n employed by Google has little practical use other than to test how well the processor works, according to John Preskill, the Caltech professor who coined the term “quantum supremacy.”

Monroe echoed that sentiment.

“The more interestin­g milestone will be a useful applicatio­n,” he said.

The promise of such future applicatio­ns in commerce and national security has attracted interest from government­s, including the United States and China, that are increasing­ly investing in the expensive basic research needed to make quantum computers useful.

One feared outcome of quantum computing is a computer powerful enough to break today’s best cryptograp­hy — though experts say it’s probably still decades away.

President Trump last year signed into law a congressio­nal agreement to spend $1.2 billion over five years for quantum research across the federal government.

Google’s research was centered at a UC Santa Barbara laboratory but relied in part on a Department of Energy supercompu­ter and experts at NASA to verify the work.

Alphabet shares climbed 1.3% on Wednesday.

 ?? Google ?? GOOGLE Chief Executive Sundar Pichai with a quantum computer at the firm’s Santa Barbara lab.
Google GOOGLE Chief Executive Sundar Pichai with a quantum computer at the firm’s Santa Barbara lab.

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