The move is the latest in a race to perfect quantum computing in
which tech firms such as Microsoft, Alphabet's Google and IBM
are jostling with both rivals and nation states to create
machines that take advantage of quantum mechanics to promise
speeds far faster than conventional silicon-based computers.
Those quantum machines could make feasible scientific
calculations that would otherwise take millions of years with
today's classical computers.
But the fundamental unit of quantum computers - called a "qubit"
- is fast but finicky, producing data errors if the quantum
computer is even slightly disturbed. To solve that problem,
quantum researchers often build more physical qubits than needed
and use error-correction techniques to yield a smaller number of
reliable and useful qubits.
Microsoft and Quantinuum said they had made a breakthrough in
that field. Microsoft applied an error-correction algorithm that
it wrote to Quantinuum's physical qubits, yielding about four
reliable qubits from 30 physical ones.
Jason Zander, Microsoft's executive vice president for strategic
missions and technologies, said the company believes that is the
best ratio of reliable qubits from a quantum chip that has ever
been shown.
"We ran more than 14,000 individual experiments without a single
error. That's up to 800 times better than anything on record,"
Zander told Reuters in an interview.
Microsoft said it plans to release the technology to its cloud
computing customers in the coming months.
Quantum researchers, both at Quantinuum and its rivals, often
cite a figure of about 100 reliable qubits as the number needed
to beat a conventional supercomputer. Neither Microsoft nor
Quantinuum on Wednesday would say how many more years they will
need to use the new technique to hit 100 reliable qubits.
But Ilyas Khan, the chief product officer of Quantinuum, said,
"The current view is that we have lopped at least two years off
that, if not more."
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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