Google unveils quantum computer breakthrough; critics say wait a qubit
Send a link to a friend
[October 24, 2019]
By Douglas Busvine and Paresh Dave
BERLIN/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Alphabet
Inc's Google said on Wednesday it had achieved a breakthrough in
computing research by using a quantum computer to solve in minutes a
complex problem that would take today's most powerful supercomputer
thousands of years to crack.
Google researchers expect that quantum computers within a few years will
fuel advancements in fields such as artificial intelligence, materials
science, and chemistry. The company is racing rivals including IBM Corp
and Microsoft Corp to be the first to commercialize the technology and
sell it through its cloud computing business.
"We're hoping that when people start using this and looking at
performance stability and cloud interface, they'll get really excited
about what we have to offer at Google," John Martinis, the company's
chief scientist for quantum hardware, told reporters.
The breakthrough was described in a paper https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-019-1666-5#Sec4
published in science journal Nature. It followed weeks of controversy
since a draft leaked over whether Google's claim of "quantum supremacy"
was valid.
IBM said a supercomputer employing a different set-up could solve the
same challenge in under three days, while chipmaker Intel said "quantum
practicality" remained years away.
Google defended its position, but did not dispute rivals' contentions.
It has manufactured a handful of chips with 54 'qubits', vastly more
powerful than the standard 64-bit chip in many consumer devices.
However, for the technology to be useful to customers it would need to
make chips with thousands of qubits.
Martinis said Google sees "a pathway" to a computer with 1,000 qubits
and expressed confidence that it had a reliable process to make its new
chip, dubbed Sycamore.
The U.S. and Chinese governments have led in the burgeoning quantum
technology field, pledging billions of dollars in funding to corporate
and state researchers to fast-track quantum development and mitigate
possible issues, including the tech's expected ability to break digital
encryption.
Google has been among the beneficiaries of the American support. "The
United States has taken a great leap forward in quantum computing," said
U.S. chief technology officer Michael Kratsios on Wednesday.
LONG-HELD DREAM
For decades, computer scientists have sought to harness quantum physics,
laws governing the behavior of particles that are smaller than atoms and
can simultaneously exist in different states.
Quantum bits, or qubits, can be set to one and zero at the same time,
unlike today's computer bits that are either ones or zeros. This
superposition property multiplies exponentially as qubits become
entangled with each other, meaning the more qubits connected, the vastly
more powerful a quantum computer becomes.
But there is a catch: Quantum researchers need to cool qubits to about
absolute zero (-273 degrees Celsius or -460 degrees Fahrenheit) to limit
vibration - or "noise" - that causes errors in calculations. It is in
this challenging task that Google, which has designed much of its own
electronics and used liquid helium for cooling, has made significant
progress.
CEO Sundar Pichai compared the achievement to building the first rocket
to leave Earth's atmosphere and touch the edge of space, an advance that
brought interplanetary travel into the realm of the possible.
[to top of second column]
|
A handout picture from October 2019 shows Sundar Pichai and Daniel
Sank (R) with one of Google's Quantum Computers in the Santa Barbara
lab, California, U.S. Picture taken in October 2019. Google/Handout
via REUTERS
"For those of us working in science and technology, it's the 'hello
world' moment we've been waiting for - the most meaningful milestone
to date in the quest to make quantum computing a reality," Pichai
wrote in a blog https://blog.google/perspectives/sundar-pichai/what-our-quantum-computing-milestone-means.
Sycamore, measuring about 10 mm (0.39 inch) across, is made using
aluminum and indium parts sandwiched between two silicon wafers. In
their experiment this year, the researchers were able to get 53 of
Sycamore's qubits to interact in a quantum state.
They then had the quantum computer detect patterns in a series of
seemingly random numbers, and it succeeded in 3 minutes and 20
seconds. They estimated that the same problem would take 10,000
years for a Summit supercomputer - the most powerful in the world
today - to solve.
HOLD ON A QUBIT
While the peer-reviewed research has drawn plaudits, with MIT's
William D. Oliver comparing it to the Wright brothers' first
flights, skeptics say Google is over-selling its achievement.
IBM said a supercomputer with additional disk storage can solve the
random number problem in at most 2-1/2 days and with greater
accuracy. It also said Google risked misleading the public by
implying the new-style computers would replace existing ones.
"Quantum computers will never reign 'supreme' over classical
computers, but will rather work in concert with them, since each
have their unique strengths," Dario Gil, director of research at
IBM, wrote in a blog.
Torsten Siebert, manager of the quantum computing research program
at Germany's Fraunhofer Society, agreed that "progress was likely to
be achieved through such hybrid combinations."
Researchers also have expressed concern about quantum computers
being used, for example, to unseal secure data and passwords or
enable new forms of surveillance.
But before quantum computers can break codes, security experts have
plenty of time to adapt, Martinis said.
"We're pretty confident we'll all stay safe and secure in the
future," he said.
(Reporting by Douglas Busvine in Berlin and Paresh Dave in San
Francisco; Editing by Mark Potter, David Gregorio and Rosalba
O'Brien)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|