IBM clears the 100-qubit mark with its new processor

Company says it's on track for 1,000+ qubits, useful computations in 2023.

By JOHN TIMMER - 11/17/2021  
https://arstechnica.com/science/2021/11/ibm-clears-the-100-qubit-mark-with-its-new-processor/


IBM has announced it has cleared a major hurdle in its effort to make quantum 
computing useful: it now has a quantum processor, called Eagle, with 127 
functional qubits.

This makes it the first company to clear the 100-qubit mark, a milestone that's 
interesting because the interactions of that many qubits can't be simulated 
using today's classical computing hardware and algorithms.

But what may be more significant is that IBM now has a roadmap that would see 
it producing the first 1,000-qubit processor in two years. And, according to 
IBM Director of Research Darío Gil, that's the point where calculations done 
with quantum hardware will start being useful.

What’s new

Gil told Ars that the new 127 qubit count was a product of multiple 
developments that have been put together for the first time.

One is that IBM switched to what it's calling a "heavy hex" qubit layout, which 
it announced earlier this year.

This layout connects qubits in a set of hexagons with shared sides. In this 
layout, qubits are connected to two, three, or a maximum of four neighbors—on 
average, that's a lower level of connectivity than some competing designs.

But Gil argued that the tradeoff is worth it, saying "it reduces the level of 
connectivity, but greatly improves crosstalk."

That improvement means that the qubits are less likely to influence their 
neighbors in ways that can introduce errors.

And that's allowed IBM to increase the density of qubits on the chip.

While the qubits remain on a single layer within the processor, the processor 
as a whole uses additional layers to host signal-carrying wires that allow the 
control and readout of the qubits.

That's common in traditional chips but new to the world of quantum computing. 
Those wires can also carry multiplexed signals.

This is critical, since the wires that carry these signals are bulky enough 
that they threatened to limit the qubit count per chip—there simply wouldn't be 
enough physical space on the chip's packaging for all the wires needed for a 
one-wire-to-one-qubit layout once the qubit count climbed.

This is the first chip IBM has made where the wiring is in a separate layer 
from the qubits.

Other key advances that Gil highlighted included the ability to tune the 
frequencies of microwaves that each individual qubit responds to, preventing 
what are called "collisions," where a signal meant for one qubit can also alter 
the behavior of others.

The quantum "compiler"—the software that sequences the order of operations that 
perform a calculation on quantum hardware—can also help avoid collisions, Gil 
told Ars.

Finally, IBM has gotten the error rate of the basic functional unit of this 
hardware, the two-qubit gate, down to 0.001. That's critical, because if error 
rates stay constant while qubit count goes up, more calculations are likely to 
suffer errors.

What’s coming

In terms of practical uses, the Eagle processor doesn't change things 
dramatically.

There are probably some interesting things you can do on it more easily than 
you could on a smaller processor, but we've not fundamentally reached the point 
when we can regularly do useful calculations that would be difficult to 
impossible on traditional computers.

In many ways, Eagle is most important as a mile marker on IBM's roadmap.

That roadmap foresees a processor with 400-plus qubits next year and something 
with over 1,000 qubits in 2023. (It shifts to a vague "and beyond" after 2023.)

Putting all the technology together in a single package for Eagle was an 
important validation for that roadmap.

"We have strong confidence that the roadmap of next year delivering a 433-qubit 
system and the year after that a system with over 1,000 would be possible," Gil 
said.

Aside from the rising qubit count, Gil also highlighted the lower error rate.

If you assume that rate continues to decline at the same pace it has over the 
last several years, Gil said that it should hit 0.0001 around the same time as 
the 1,000-qubit processors show up. That will be sufficient for some levels of 
error control and/or correction and will expand the sorts of algorithms that 
can be run on future processors.

That, IBM argues, combined with continued improvements in the compiler and 
control software, will fundamentally change the utility of quantum computing.

"I think that we're pretty confident that we will be able to demonstrate 
quantum advantage to some use cases that have value within the next two years," 
Gil told Ars.

This doesn't mean that, overnight, everything will work better—or at all—if 
it's run on quantum hardware.

Instead, Gil argued that the transition out of our current state (a small 
number of error-prone qubits) will be gradual.

Some specific applications will start running more efficiently on the very best 
quantum hardware in the near future.

Over time, as further improvements are made, we'll see a growing number of 
applications that see what Gil termed a quantum advantage. But there won't be 
any sort of overnight change.

That “and beyond” bit

While the nature of the quantum processors that show quantum advantages aren't 
specified in IBM's roadmap, IBM for the first time started talking about what 
might come much further out, which it's calling Quantum System 2.

While most of the focus is on the quantum processors and their properties, 
these go into a hardware setup that's largely unchanged between generations of 
chips.

These include traditional computers that set up the problem and sort out the 
sequence of control signals, the wires that carry the signals to the processor, 
the refrigeration hardware, and so on. IBM is now calling that sort of setup 
Quantum System 1.

And Gil said it has a lot more mileage in it.

While the cooling device, called a cryostat, may have a limited amount of 
space, IBM is already experimenting with building extralarge cryostats.

"We think inside a cryostat we will be able to build machines that are very 
large—meaning hundreds of thousands, maybe a million qubits," Gil said. This 
may require wiring multiple processors together into a single, much larger 
quantum computer.

But at some point, we may want to move beyond the Quantum System 1 model and 
develop the ability to spread computation between cryostats. And that is not 
simple.

Gil said IBM is expecting to need to shift the microwave frequencies used for 
controlling qubits to the optical frequencies used to transmit data and then 
reverse the process at the destination cryostat—all while maintaining any 
entanglement.

"That device hasn't been invented yet," Gil said, while highlighting that 
there's no known physics that prevents it from working.

Obviously, that's quite a bit further out.

For the next few years, the big question will be whether IBM can stay on its 
roadmap and whether one of the competing technologies can ramp up their qubit 
counts.

Trapped ion qubit hardware has been demonstrated with high connectivity and 
extremely low error rates—two areas where IBM's hardware isn't as strong.

But we've yet to see whether they can scale quickly enough to stay competitive 
with IBM's expectations for rapidly growing its qubit count.

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