
(Image: IBM)
The race to build a full-blown quantum computer is heating up. Tech giant IBM has been working on error-correcting techniques for quantum hardware, and has now won funding from the US Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) to take it to the next level.
Advertisement
Quantum computers promise to vastly outperform normal PCs on certain problems. But efforts to build them have been hampered by the fragility of quantum bits, or qubits, as the systems used to store them are easily affected by heat and electromagnetic radiation. IBM is one of a number of companies and research teams developing error-correcting techniques to iron out these instabilities.
Traditional technologies already make wide use of error correction. For example, a DVD stores data in the patterns of etched markings on its surface, and these markings are grouped in certain ways to reduce errors.
IBM is working on a similar technique for quantum computers, laying out qubits made from superconducting chips in a grid to allow a number of error-prone qubits act as a single, stable one, known as a logical qubit.
Packing challenge
鈥淲hat we鈥檝e done thus far is to demonstrate some of the concepts of error correction and detection,鈥 says Jerry Chow at IBM鈥檚 Thomas J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e doing with this programme is aiming for larger system sizes which permit the ability to encode a logical qubit.鈥
Chow says they need around 20 physical qubits to create one logical qubit, but packing the qubits close together will be tricky. 鈥淲hen you put many of them together, you don鈥檛 know that they are going to work the same way as when you just have one,鈥 he says. 鈥淗ow you properly engineer this larger chip is going to be a big challenge.鈥
IBM and IARPA have not yet revealed how much funding is going into the five-year research programme, but money is already pouring into quantum computing around the world.
The UK recently announced a 拢270 million investment to bring quantum technology 鈥 including a quantum computer 鈥 to market by 2020, and Google has hired researchers to build its own quantum processors .
鈥淚t鈥檚 becoming more of a competitive field now,鈥 says Chow. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a healthy type of competition that will push the entire field forward.鈥
(Image: IBM)