Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Google Declares 'Quantum Supremacy' With Chip Of The Future

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Oct, 2019 08:39 PM

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai on Wednesday announced the team at Google AI has achieved sort of "quantum supremacy" with developing a chip that performed the target computation in 200 seconds, which would otherwise take the world's fastest supercomputer 10,000 years.


    Published in the journal Nature, the Google AP paper said the team developed a new 54-qubit processor, named "Sycamore", that is comprised of fast, high-fidelity quantum logic gates, in order to perform the benchmark testing.


    "Very proud that our @GoogleAI team has achieved a big breakthrough in quantum computing known as quantum supremacy after over a decade of work, as published in @Nature. Thank you to our collaborators in the research community who helped make this possible," tweeted Pichai.


    The quantum supremacy experiment was run on a fully programmable 54-qubit processor named.


    It is comprised of a two-dimensional grid where each qubit is connected to four other qubits.


    As a consequence, the chip has enough connectivity that the qubit states quickly interact throughout the entire processor, making the overall state impossible to emulate efficiently with a classical computer.


    Not just Google but several tech giants like Microsoft, IBM and Intel have joined the race to build a scalable quantum computer.


    IBM recently unveiled its quantum computer with 53 qubits.


    A quantum computer can solve complex problems that would otherwise take billions of years for today's computers to solve. This has massive implications for research in health care, energy, environmental systems, smart materials and more.


    Google said it will make its supremacy-class processors available to collaborators and academic researchers, as well as companies that are interested in developing algorithms.


    "Second, we're investing in our team and technology to build a fault-tolerant quantum computer as quickly as possible. Such a device promises a number of valuable applications," Google said in a blog post.


    The current bits in computers store information as either 1 or 0, thus limiting the potential to make sense when faced with gigantic volumes of data.

     

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    CBS News Hires Josh Elliott For Online News Service

    CBS News Hires Josh Elliott For Online News Service
    Elliott left ABC for NBC Sports a few years ago when contract talks to stay broke down, and the move sharply cut down on his visibility.

    CBS News Hires Josh Elliott For Online News Service

    Facebook's Latin American Boss Arrested In Brazil

    Police in Sao Paulo say they have arrested the vice-president of Facebook in Latin America.

    Facebook's Latin American Boss Arrested In Brazil

    WhatsApp To End Support For BlackBerry Devices By End Of This Year

    WhatsApp To End Support For BlackBerry Devices By End Of This Year
    It says it wants to focus its efforts on mobile platforms most used by consumers, which it says are Google, Apple and Microsoft operating systems.

    WhatsApp To End Support For BlackBerry Devices By End Of This Year

    Lockdown: Apple Could Make It Even Tougher To Hack iPhones

    Lockdown: Apple Could Make It Even Tougher To Hack iPhones
    Suppose the FBI wins its court battle and forces Apple to help unlock an iPhone used by one of the San Bernardino killers. That could open all iPhones up to potential government scrutiny — but it's not the end of the story.

    Lockdown: Apple Could Make It Even Tougher To Hack iPhones

    With Its New S7 Phone, Samsung Looks Even More Like Apple

    With Its New S7 Phone, Samsung Looks Even More Like Apple
    Apple and Samsung phones, which have been looking more and more alike over the past few years, are much closer to virtual twins with Samsung's latest Galaxy S7.

    With Its New S7 Phone, Samsung Looks Even More Like Apple

    Facebook's 'Like' Button Gets 'Angry' And 'Sad' As Friends, 7 Thinks To Know

    Facebook's 'Like' Button Gets 'Angry' And 'Sad' As Friends, 7 Thinks To Know
    Here are seven things to know about Facebook's latest feature, known as Reactions.

    Facebook's 'Like' Button Gets 'Angry' And 'Sad' As Friends, 7 Thinks To Know