REVOLUTION IN WORKS

Japan leading quest for first quantum computer

A quantum computer, dubbed the ultimate computer that can process information at a 
speed 100 million times faster than a supercomputer, is attracting global attention. 
If the quantum computer is actually produced, there will be an "information 
communication revolution" because it can also be applied to cipher technology, 
industry analysts said. 

NTT Corp. and NEC Corp. are leading other companies in developing the quantum 
computer, but the analysts said it will take several decades before their research can 
be put into practical use. 

"Shor's Algorithm," a method developed in 1994 by AT&T scientist Peter Shor for using 
the quantum computer, sent a shock wave throughout the industry worldwide. 

Enterprises in the United States launched full-scale research, believing that the 
development of such a computer was imperative. 

Those in Europe and Japan have followed suit. In Canada, a venture company was created 
to develop it. 

Existing computers store information as bits, denoted as 0s or 1s. But the quantum 
computer can store both 0s and 1s within the equivalent of a single bit, called a 
qubit -- meaning the amount of information that can be encoded dramatically rises. 

Further increases in the number of qubits would enable a sharp expansion in the 
ability of information processing, and the quantum computer can resolve factorization 
in 1/1 millionth of a second, against 10,000 years required by existing computers. 

Weather forecasts and the development of medicines requiring massive calculations can 
also be processed in a short time. 

NTT Basic Research Laboratories in Atsugi, Kanagawa Prefecture, whose quantum computer 
research is considered the most advanced in the world, has confirmed the superposition 
of quantum states -- the coexistence of 0s and 1s in a single quantum bit. 

To realize the superposition, extremely complicated and detailed technology is 
required, with the institute's director, Hideaki Takayanagi, saying, "We are 
struggling every day." 

The movement of more than 1,000 bits is needed to realize the quantum computer. "Two 
or three bits are possible in five years. Several decades will be needed to have more 
than 1,000 bits," noted Takayanagi, who is said to be a researcher in Japan most 
likely to win the Nobel Prize. 

Another problem is the budget for the research. 

The government cannot earmark sufficient funds for the research because of its severe 
fiscal situation. 

Only NTT and NEC can conduct such research because other major manufacturers are 
undergoing restructuring. "At this rate, basic technology will be held (by the U.S. 
and Europe)," Takayanagi said. 

The Japan Times: May 3, 2004
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