The breakthrough addresses concerns that powerful quantum computers could eventually crack encryption standards to leave vulnerable financial systems, government communications, health data and media.
A new ultra-fast monitoring system reveals that quantum computer qubits can change from stable to unstable in mere milliseconds.
Quantum computers work by applying quantum operations, such as quantum gates, to delicate quantum states. Ideally, quantum ...
The commonly used RSA encryption algorithm can now be cracked by a quantum computer with only 100,000 qubits, but the technical challenges to building such a machine remain numerous ...
Quantum computers—devices that process information using quantum mechanical effects—have long been expected to outperform classical systems on certain tasks. Over the past few decades, researchers ...
Jacob Benestad in front of an experimental setup in the laboratory at the Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen. This setup is similar to the one used during the group's experiments at the ...
2don MSN
Researchers create a never-before-seen molecule and prove its exotic nature with quantum computing
An international team of scientists from IBM, The University of Manchester, Oxford University, ETH Zurich, EPFL and the University of Regensburg have created and characterized a molecule unlike any ...
Teleportation is a reality in 2025 — well, at least for quantum computers. In February 2025, Oxford University demonstrated the teleportation of quantum data from one independent quantum processor to ...
When Richard Feynman first conceived of quantum computers in the 1980s, he believed they should primarily investigate quantum phenomena. So that’s what a group of chemists did: they used quantum ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Researchers birth a wild new molecule and verify it with quantum computing
An international team of researchers has synthesized a carbon chain molecule with a never-before-seen electronic twist and ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Chinese researchers’ 78-qubit processor slows quantum chaos to delay information loss
Scientists at the Institute of Physics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences have directly ...
Quantum computing company D-Wave has installed one of its quantum annealers alongside Davidson Technologies for federal customers to access. D-Wave has made its quantum annealing computer available ...
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