Quantum - Tuesday, November 12, 2024: Commentary with Notable and Interesting News, Articles, and Papers
Robert Sutor
Quantum Computing and AI, but not necessarily together: Tech Leader, Ph.D., Non-Executive Director, Author, Advisor, Pundit, Keynote Speaker, Professor, Cat Lover
Commentary and a selection of the most important recent news, articles, and papers about Quantum. This newsletter is also available on Substack
Today’s Brief Commentary
Today’s links are primarily about quantum computing, with a couple of others thrown in about a quantum game and quantum networking.
Start paying attention to the Imec company for quantum-related technology. It shows up twice in the links below. Remember, quantum computing is not only about qubits; it’s about all the different parts of the systems and the supply chain for obtaining them.
I want to highlight an interesting research paper from IBM researchers in the Quantum Computing – Technical section below. The scientists show that combining two different kinds of error-correcting codes
Computing is heterogeneous.
I put that statement on its own line because we all need to be reminded of those three words. It has been this way for decades, going back to the point where we added Arithmetic Processing Units (APUs) and Floating Point Units (FPUs) to Central Processing Units (CPUs), if not before. These weren’t hybrid systems but integrated systems made of heterogeneous components
Games
Gamified Universal Quantum Literacy: Quantum Odyssey by Quarks Interactive - Inside Quantum Technology
Author: Brian Siegelwax
(Thursday, November 7, 2024) “For over five years, Quarks Interactive has been developing a video game called Quantum Odyssey. Since the beginning, it has set out to be a fun and visual medium for bringing quantum literacy to the masses. There are no math, physics, or coding prerequisites to play this game, so all ages and backgrounds can benefit”
Quantum Computing
Imec Bets on Silicon Spin Qubits for Scalable Quantum Computers | EE Times Europe
Author: Pat Brans
(Wednesday, June 19, 2024) “How does imec take silicon spin qubits from lab to fab to prepare them for use on an industrial scale?”
Fractional gates reduce circuit depth at the utility scale | IBM Quantum Computing Blog
Authors: Daniella Garcia Almeida; Kaelyn Ferris; Naoki Kanazawa; Blake Johnson; and Robert Davis
Commentary: Buried in this is the statement that IBM is removing pulse-level control from all its quantum computing systems. I think this will be controversial among the research users. Other than saying that they are focusing on higher-level features, IBM might want to share pulse-level usage numbers.
(Thursday, November 7, 2024) “Fractional gates are a new type of quantum logic gate that can help to increase the efficiency of utility-scale experiments.”
IonQ - IonQ to Increase Performance and Scale of Quantum Computers with Photonic Integrated Circuits in Collaboration with imec
Commentary: Photonic integrated circuits (PICs) are essential for reducing the SWaP-C (Size, Weight, Power and Cost) of quantum computing and networking technologies that use photonics.
(Thursday, November 7, 2024) “IonQ (NYSE: IONQ), a leader in the quantum computing industry, announced today that it is developing photonic integrated circuits (PICs) and chip-scale ion trap technology for trapped ion quantum computing in partnership with imec , a world-renowned RD center in nanoelectronics and digital technologies. By optimizing the design, production, and integration of chip-scale photonic devices and ion traps for scalable and high-performance quantum computers, the developments aim to push the boundaries of quantum computing performance. Traditional trapped ion quantum computing approaches rely on bulk optics for laser light modulation, delivery, and photon collection. By moving traditional bulk optical components into integrated photonic devices, IonQ aims to reduce overall hardware system size and cost, increase qubit count, and improve system performance and robustness. Chip-scale optical technologies and IonQ’s tight integration with imec’s trap manufacturing and packing are expected”
领英推荐
RIKEN, NTT, and Amplify Inc. Introduce General-Purpose Optical Quantum Computer | Quantum Insider
Author: Cierra Choucair
Commentary: I suspect some details in the press release were lost or confused in translation, but RIKEN is now a quantum computing player to watch.
(Monday, November 11, 2024) “A collaboration has developed a general-purpose optical quantum computer, which is accessible through the cloud.”
Quantum Computing - Technical
[2312.06451] JuliQAOA: Fast, Flexible QAOA Simulation
Authors: Golden, John; B?rtschi, Andreas; O'Malley, Daniel; Pelofske, Elijah; and Eidenbenz, Stephan
Commentary: I'd love to see more quantum software written in Julia.
(Monday, December 11, 2023) “We introduce JuliQAOA, a simulation package specifically built
[2411.03202] Architectures for Heterogeneous Quantum Error Correction Codes
Authors: Stein, Samuel; Xu, Shifan; Cross, Andrew W.; Yoder, Theodore J.; Javadi-Abhari, Ali; Liu, Chenxu; Liu, Kun; Zhou, Zeyuan; Guinn, Charles; ; ...; and Li, Ang
Commentary: In the future, we may need two or more kinds of error-correction to achieve fault tolerance within a single system.
(Tuesday, November 5, 2024) “Quantum Error Correction (QEC) is essential for future quantum computers
Scaling whole-chip QAOA for higher-order ising spin glass models on heavy-hex graphs | npj Quantum Information
Authors: Pelofske, Elijah; B?rtschi, Andreas; Cincio, Lukasz; Golden, John; and Eidenbenz, Stephan
Commentary: Interesting paper from computational scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
(Wednesday, November 6, 2024) “We show that the quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) for higher-order, random coefficient, heavy-hex compatible spin glass Ising models has strong parameter concentration across problem sizes from 16 up to 127 qubits for p?=?1 up to p?=?5, which allows for computationally efficient parameter transfer of QAOA angles. Matrix product state (MPS) simulation is used to compute noise-free QAOA performance. Hardware-compatible short-depth QAOA circuits are executed on ensembles of 100 higher-order Ising models on noisy IBM quantum superconducting processors with 16, 27, and 127 qubits using QAOA angles learned from a single 16-qubit instance using the JuliQAOA tool. We show that the best quantum processors find lower energy solutions up to p?=?2 or p?=?3, and find mean energies that are about a factor of two off from the noise-free distribution. We show that p?=?1 QAOA energy landscapes remain very similar as the problem size increases using NISQ hardware gridsearches with up to a 414 qubit processor.”
Quantum Networking
QUANT-NET: Quantum Application Network Testbed for Novel Entanglement Technology
“Funded by the Advanced Scientific Computing Research (ASCR) division of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, the Quantum Application Network Testbed for Novel Entanglement Technology (QUANT-NET) project brings together world-leading experts from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley), the California Institute of Technology, and the University of Innsbruck to construct a testbed for quantum networking technologies.”
The 2nd least qualified person in quantum.
4 个月Inside Quantum Technology and Quarks Interactive, check out the first link!
Holds all 9 ISC2 cybersecurity certifications, 1 of only 11 people worldwide | Board of Directors @Quantum eMotion | 27-year IBM Cloud Division, Candle IT Manager and Cybersecurity SME | Expert advisor cybersecurity, AI
4 个月Robert Sutor I totally agree that many people don’t realize what comprises the supply chain, components, and quantum ecosystem. At Quantum eMotion we secure quantum communications using entropy and emerging technologies like electron tunneling. Please take a look at what we’re doing, I’m sure you’ll find it fascinating. Thanks! ???? https://www.quantumemotion.com