`

"We are entirely focused on the path to universal fault tolerant quantum 
computers," Ilyas Khan, chief product officer at Quantinuum and founder of 
Cambridge Quantum Computing.


New quantum computer smashes 'quantum supremacy' record by a factor of 100 — 
and it consumes 30,000 times less power

By Keumars Afifi-Sabet published 21 hours ago
https://www.livescience.com/technology/computing/new-quantum-computer-smashes-quantum-supremacy-record-by-a-factor-of-100-and-it-consumes-30000-times-less-power



The 56-qubit H2-1 computer has broken the previous record in the 'quantum 
supremacy' benchmark first set by Google in 2019.

[Photo Caption] Scientists achieved an XMB score of 0.35, which means the H2 
quantum computer can produce results without producing an error 35% of the time 
(Image credit: credit Quantinuum)]


A new quantum computer has broken a world record in "quantum supremacy," 
topping the performance of benchmarking set by Google's Sycamore machine by 
100-fold.

Using the new 56-qubit H2-1 computer, scientists at quantum computing company 
Quantinuum ran various experiments to benchmark the machine's performance 
levels and the quality of the qubits used.

They published their results June 4 in a study uploaded to the preprint 
database arXiv. The study has not been peer-reviewed yet.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.02501

To demonstrate the potential of the quantum computer, the scientists at 
Quantinuum used a well-known algorithm to measure how noisy, or error-prone, 
qubits were.

Quantum computers can perform calculations in parallel thanks to the laws of 
quantum mechanics and entanglement between qubits, meaning the fates of 
different qubits can instantly change each other. Classical computers, by 
contrast, can work only in sequence.

Adding more qubits to a system also scales up the power of a machine 
exponentially; scientists predict that quantum computers will one day perform 
complex calculations in seconds that a classical supercomputer would have taken 
thousands of years to solve.

The point where quantum computers overtake classical ones is known as "quantum 
supremacy," but achieving this milestone in a practical way would need a 
quantum computer with millions of qubits. The largest machine today has only 
about 1,000 qubits.

The reason we would need so many qubits for "quantum supremacy" is that they 
are inherently prone to error, so many would be needed to correct those errors. 
That's why many researchers are now focusing on building more reliable qubits, 
rather than simply adding more qubits to machines.

When quantum computers overtake classical ones is known as "quantum supremacy," 
but achieving this milestone would need a quantum computer with millions of 
qubits.

The team tested the fidelity of H2-1's output using what's known as the linear 
cross entropy benchmark (XEB). XEB spits out results between 0 (none of the 
output is error-free) and 1 (completely error-free), Quantinuum representatives 
said in a statement.

Scientists at Google first tested the company's Sycamore quantum computer using 
XEB in 2019, demonstrating that it could complete a calculation in 200 seconds 
that would have taken the most powerful supercomputer at the time 10,000 years 
to finish.

They registered an XEB result of approximately 0.002 with the 53 
superconducting qubits built into Sycamore.

https://www.livescience.com/google-hits-quantum-supremacy.html

But in the new study, Quantinuum scientists — in partnership with JPMorgan, 
Caltech and Argonne National Laboratory — achieved an XEB score of 
approximately 0.35. This means the H2 quantum computer can produce results 
without producing an error 35% of the time.

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"We are entirely focused on the path to universal fault tolerant quantum 
computers," Ilyas Khan, chief product officer at Quantinuum and founder of 
Cambridge Quantum Computing, said in the statement. "This objective has not 
changed, but what has changed in the past few months is clear evidence of the 
advances that have been made possible due to the work and the investment that 
has been made over many, many years."

Quantinuum previously collaborated with Microsoft to demonstrate "logical 
qubits" that had an error rate 800 times lower than physical qubits.

In the study, published in April, scientists demonstrated they could run 
experiments with the logical qubits with an error rate of just 1 in 100,000 — 
which is much stronger than the 1-in-100 error rate of physical qubits, 
Microsoft representatives said.

"These results show that whilst the full benefits of fault tolerant quantum 
computers have not changed in nature, they may be reachable earlier than was 
originally expected," added Khan.

Keumars Afifi-Sabet
Channel Editor, Technology

Keumars is the technology editor at Live Science. He has written for a variety 
of publications including ITPro, The Week Digital, ComputerActive, The 
Independent, The Observer, Metro and TechRadar Pro. He has worked as a 
technology journalist for more than five years, having previously held the role 
of features editor with ITPro. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist and has a 
degree in biomedical sciences from Queen Mary, University of London. He's also 
registered as a foundational chartered manager with the Chartered Management 
Institute (CMI), having qualified as a Level 3 Team leader with distinction in 
2023.
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