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C.Martel
21st September 2019, 02:31 PM
Google Says It's Achieved Quantum Supremacy, a World-First: Report

A Google researcher’s paper claiming to have achieved quantum supremacy, a major early milestone in the field of quantum computing, appeared on a NASA website this week before being removed, the Financial Times reports.

Google, as well as IBM, Microsoft, Intel, and other large tech companies and startups, have been working to build quantum computers, a new kind of computer based on an entirely different architecture than classical computers. Though this announcement is not official, scientists and industry experts have long expected Google to build a quantum computer capable of reaching this milestone—a quantum computer performing a calculation that a classical computer can’t.

You can read our primer on quantum computers here and our primer on quantum supremacy here. But the gist is, classical computers are systems where problems are abstracted onto a system of two-position switches called bits (ones and zeros) that interact through the rules of logic. Quantum computers are instead based on quantum bits, or qubits, that are also two-position switches, but they interact via the same rules that subatomic particles follow, called quantum mechanics.

This quantum architecture purportedly could allow quantum computers to solve a set of problems that classical computers can’t in a reasonable amount of time—this includes problems in cryptography as well as modeling molecules. But the difficulty maintaining qubits’ quantum behavior for a usable amount of time, also called the coherence time, has prevented researchers from demonstrating any sort of quantum speedup.

The Financial Times reports that they saw a Google publication claiming that the company’s quantum processor can perform a calculation “in three minutes and 20 seconds that would take today’s most advanced classical computer, known as Summit, approximately 10,000 years”—a demonstration of quantum supremacy. Google has not yet responded to a Gizmodo request for comment, and it has long been cagey about when and how it’d make the announcement.

We don’t have many details as to what calculation the computer performed, nor can we independently verify the Financial Times report. But previous proposals essentially involve the quantum computer racing a classical computer simulating a random quantum circuit. The achievement would not be a surprise—we’ve long known that Google has been testing a 72-qubit device called Bristlecone with which it hoped to achieve quantum supremacy. Financial Times reports that the supremacy experiment was instead performed with a 53-qubit processor codenamed Sycamore.

This would be a major early milestone when it comes to comparing these quantum devices against classical computers. But we’re a long way off before quantum computers actually demonstrate quantum usefulness. That would require increasing the coherence time and introducing error correction schemes‚ those where multiple qubits are combined into one in order to ensure that the quantum computer outputs the answers it’s supposed to output.

“Google’s recent update on the achievement of quantum supremacy is a notable mile marker as we continue to advance the potential of quantum computing. Achieving a commercially viable quantum computer will require advancements across a number of pillars of the technology stack,” James Clarke, Director of Quantum Hardware at Intel, told Gizmodo in an email.

It’s possible scientists may not even accept Google’s announcement as valid. Most importantly, if it takes 10,000 years for a supercomputer to check the answer a quantum computer produced, how do you know that the quantum computer got the answer right in the first place?

We’ll keep you posted as we learn more about the reported paper.

https://gizmodo.com/google-says-its-achieved-quantum-supremacy-a-world-fir-1838299829

C.Martel
21st September 2019, 02:35 PM
I wonder how quickly these quantum computers can mine every last crypto-currency to crash crypto prices worldwide.

Math tests are NOT money. Gold is. This decade run of replacing gold and silver with cryptocurrencies can be over whenever the 'government' bans cryptos or when quantum computers solve every algorithm of remaining bitcoins in less than 2 minutes.

C.Martel
21st September 2019, 03:36 PM
Notice how the zionists promote bitcoins and cryptos, the zionists want cryptos to succeed.

And the zionists don't use super computers and quantum computers crash the price. We could have bitcoins here for a while.

In the next decade, the quantum computers can break into secure wallets of bitcoins.

midnight rambler
23rd September 2019, 07:42 PM
https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/googles-quantum-supremacy-render-all-cryptocurrency-military-secrets-breakable

Horn
23rd September 2019, 10:07 PM
Notice how the zionists promote bitcoins and cryptos, the zionists want cryptos to succeed.

US states hit Facebook and Google with new antitrust probes

https://www.france24.com/en/20190906-us-states-hit-facebook-google-amazon-antitrust-probe-trump

Apparently you have to warn a monopoly well in advance with a probe these days, before executing.

"Hi we're from the government, are you prepared yet to be probed? Do you need to untie any tight ends first?"

Ares
24th September 2019, 04:56 AM
If this turns out to be true I'm shocked at how fast it's gotten to that many qubits already. PJW is correct in his timing, SHA-256 could be cracked with a 256 qubit quantum computer in as little as a couple of seconds.

But that also breeds quantum cryptography, which begs the question will classical computers be able to handle it?

My guess is that if possible classical computers can perform quantum cryptography algorithms then the cryptos will move to quantum cryptography, in order to make them unbreakable.

old steel
24th September 2019, 12:33 PM
Bitcoin is doing the crash thing, down over $1200.00 currently.

https://www.investing.com/crypto/bitcoin/btc-usd

monty
24th September 2019, 02:32 PM
More on the 53 qubit quantum computer


https://amp.interestingengineering.com/ibms-53-qubit-quantum-computer-will-be-available-by-october (https://amp.interestingengineering.com/ibms-53-qubit-quantum-computer-will-be-available-by-october?__twitter_impression=true)

IBM's 53 Qubit Quantum Computer Will Be Available by October

Fabienne LangSeptember 20th, 2019
https://inteng-storage.s3.amazonaws.com/img/iea/bM6AQmxX67/sizes/ibm-53-qubit-qcomputer_resize_md.jpgAndrei Stanescu/iStock (https://www.istockphoto.com/de/en/photo/ibm-headquarters-located-in-soma-district-san-francisco-gm1170762235-324092113)

On Wednesday, IBM announced (https://newsroom.ibm.com/2019-09-18-IBM-Opens-Quantum-Computation-Center-in-New-York-Brings-Worlds-Largest-Fleet-of-Quantum-Computing-Systems-Online-Unveils-New-53-Qubit-Quantum-System-for-Broad-Use) the launch of its most massive quantum computer, with 53 qubits. It will be available online for the company's quantum computing costumers, as of mid-October (https://www.cnet.com/news/ibm-new-53-qubit-quantum-computer-is-its-biggest-yet/).
This is a big leap forward in the quantum computing world. The new computer will help bridge the gap between classical computers and the world of quantum

RELATED: IBM EXPECTS COMMERCIALIZATION OF QUANTUM COMPUTERS IN 3 TO 5 YEARS (https://interestingengineering.com/ibm-expects-commercialization-of-quantum-computers-in-3-to-5-years)
Quantum computers

Still in its experimental stages, quantum computing is limited by tricky physics, and the fact that quantum computers need to be stored at very cold and specific temperatures means that it limits the development of these systems.

But, when quantum computing works well, it can help solve computing problems that classical computers simply can't. For example, optimizing financial investment performance and delivering packages as time, and fuel-efficient as possible.

https://inteng-storage.s3.amazonaws.com/img/iea/bM6AQmxX67/ibm-quantum-computer.pngIBM quantum computer. Source: IBM (https://www.ibm.com/quantum-computing/technology/systems/)

Qubits are what store quantum computers' data. Dario Gil (https://www.cnet.com/news/ibm-new-53-qubit-quantum-computer-is-its-biggest-yet/), director of IBM Research, said: "The new quantum system is important because it offers a larger lattice and gives users the ability to run even more complex entanglement and connectivity experiments."

IBM and quantum computers

IBM's new machine will be part of the company's Quantum Computation Center in New York State. The Center will also house five (https://www.cnet.com/news/ibm-new-53-qubit-quantum-computer-is-its-biggest-yet/) other quantum computers, each with 20 qubits. The plan is to increase this number to 14 computers by next month.

IBM states that it will provide 95% (https://techcrunch.com/2019/09/18/ibm-will-soon-launch-a-53-qubit-quantum-computer/)service availability for its quantum computers.

The new 53 qubit (https://newsroom.ibm.com/2019-09-18-IBM-Opens-Quantum-Computation-Center-in-New-York-Brings-Worlds-Largest-Fleet-of-Quantum-Computing-Systems-Online-Unveils-New-53-Qubit-Quantum-System-for-Broad-Use)computer will introduce new techniques that will allow IBM to launch bigger, more reliable systems for cloud deployments. The custom electronics will be more compact, for example, which will improve scaling and bringing down error rates.

Gil (https://techcrunch.com/2019/09/18/ibm-will-soon-launch-a-53-qubit-quantum-computer/) also said, "Our global momentum has been extraordinary since we put the very first quantum computer on the cloud in 2016, with the goal of moving quantum computing beyond isolated lab experiments that only a handful organizations could do, into the hands of tens of thousands of users."

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/b-0ZNlqaSBE/sddefault.jpg#404_is_fine

He continued (https://techcrunch.com/2019/09/18/ibm-will-soon-launch-a-53-qubit-quantum-computer/), "The single goal of this passionate community is to achieve what we call Quantum Advantage, producing powerful quantum systems that can ultimately solve real problems facing our clients that are not viable using today’s classical methods alone, and by making even more IBM Quantum systems available we believe that goal is achievable."

IBM is clearly taking its quantum research seriously. The company currently has 80 partnerships (https://techcrunch.com/2019/09/18/ibm-will-soon-launch-a-53-qubit-quantum-computer/), from a range of commercial companies, academic institutions, and research laboratories.

Some of these institutions have started using these systems to help solve real-world problems, but there's still a way to go until quantum computing is fully ready to solve these problems.