Microsoft believes it has made a key breakthrough in quantum computing, unlocking the potential for quantum computers to solve industrial-scale problems, The Verge reported.
The software giant has spent 17 years working on a research project to create the new material and architecture for quantum computing, and it’s unveiling the Majorana 1 processor, Microsoft’s first quantum processor based on this new architecture.
At the core of a quantum computer are qubits, a unit of information in quantum computing much like the binary bits that computers use today. Companies like IBM, Microsoft, and Google have all been trying to make qubits for years now because they’re a lot more delicate and sensitive to noise that can create errors or lead to loss of data.
Majorana 1 can potentially fit a million qubits onto a single chip that’s not much bigger than the CPUs inside desktop PCs and servers. Microsoft isn’t using the electrons for the compute in this new chip; its using the Majorana particle that theoretical physicist Ettore Majorana described in 1937.
Microsoft has reached this milestone by creating what it calls the “world’s first topoconductor,” a new type of material that can not only observe but also control Majorana particles to create more reliable qubits.
Microsoft today introduced Majorana 1, the world’s first quantum chip powered by a new Topological Core architecture that it expects will realize quantum computers capable of meaningful, industrial-scale problems in years, not decades.
It leverages the world’s first topoconductor, a breakthrough type of material which can observe and control Majorana particles to produce more reliable scalable qubits, which are the building blocks for quantum computers.
In the same way that the invention of semiconductors made today’s smartphones, computers and electronics possible, topoconductors and the new type of chip they enable offer a path to developing quantum systems that can scale to a million qubits and are capable of tackling the most complex industrial and societal problems, Microsoft said.
The new architecture used to develop the Majorana 1 processor offers a clear path to fit a million qubits on a single chip that can fit in the palm of one’s hand, Microsoft said. This is a needed threshold for quantum computers to deliver transformative, real-world solutions — such as breaking down microplastics for construction, manufacturing or healthcare.
The Guardian reported: Quantum computers could be built within years rather than decades, according to Microsoft, which has unveiled a breakthrough that it said could pave the way for faster development.
The tech firm has developed a chip which, it says, echos the invention of the semiconductors that made today’s smartphones, computers and electronics possible by miniaturization and increased processing power.
The chip is powered by the world’s first topoconductor, which can create a new state of matter that is not a solid, liquid, or gas — making it possible to design quantum systems that fit into a single chip smaller than the palm of a hand to create more hardware.
In my opinion, it sounds like Microsoft’s world’s first topoconductor could be useful for companies who are interested in accessing Microsoft’s Majorana 1 processor.