Australian
scientists along with other international team claim to have designed a tiny
crystal, made of just 300 atoms, capable to run a quantum computer so powerful
that it would take a computer of the size of the known universe to match it.
According to ABC report, the details of the ion crystal which has been designed
by Australia, South Africa and US, have been published in the journal Nature
today. "We've surpassed the computational potential of this system
relative to classical computers by something like 10 to the [power of] 80,
which is 80 orders of magnitude, a really enormous number," the University
of Sydney's Michael Biercuk said. Quantum computing is a kind of information
science that is based on the notion that if one performs computations in a
fundamentally different way than the way your classical desktop computer works,
there's a huge potential to solve a variety of problems that are very, very
hard or near impossible for standard computers, he said. Biercuk added,
"If you wanted to think how big a classical computer would need to be in
order to solve this problem of roughly 300 interacting quantum particles, it
turns out that that computer would need to be the size of the known universe -
which is clearly something that's not possible to achieve". He said that
the central element is something like a millimetre in diameter, 300 atoms that
are suspended in space. "But of course everything depends on a huge amount
of technical infrastructure around it. So there are vacuum chambers and pumps
and lasers, and all of that takes up something like a room. "The quantum
computer will move to a stage where it is so far out in front and performing
such complex tasks it will be difficult to check if it is working accurately.
"They're not easily checked by a classical computer which opens a whole
variety of problems," Biercuk said.
Source:
The Financial Express
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