Honeywell says it built the world's most powerful quantum computer
Honeywell says it built the world's most powerful quantum computer
It will share more details on it
sometime in the next three months.
Igor Bonifacic, @igorbonifacic March 3, 2020
When it comes to quantum
computers, we tend to think of companies like Google and IBM as the big players in the field, but there
could soon be more competition in the space. Honeywell says sometime in the next three months it will
unveil a quantum computer that is at least twice as powerful as any current
device.
Breaking
down that claim requires some context. As Protocol points out,
most companies talk about qubits when they speak to the capabilities of their
machines. For instance, Sycamore, the computer Google claimed last year achieved quantum supremacy, had
53 qubits. Honeywell is instead using a metric called quantum volume to talk up
the capabilities of its machine. IBM coined the term, and here's how it defines
it:
"Quantum
Volume takes into account the number of qubits, connectivity, and gate and
measurement errors. Material improvements to underlying physical hardware, such
as increases in coherence times, reduction of device crosstalk, and software
circuit compiler efficiency, can point to measurable progress in Quantum
Volume, as long as all improvements happen at a similar pace."
The point here is that quantum
volume attempts to measure the performance of a computer by taking a holistic
view of its different parts. Raw qubits are important in the calculation, but
so is how they interact with one another. For instance, the lower the error
rate those qubits generate, the better the score. Ultimately, however, the
larger the quantum volume value, the more complex problems the computer can
solve.
Honeywell
claims its upcoming computer will have a quantum volume of at least 64. To put
that number in perspective, IBM recently announced a 28-qubit computer it built
had a quantum volume of 32. The company was able to achieve
this feat in part to thanks to a breakthrough it made in 2015 when it developed
a technology that uses lasers to trap electrically charged atoms in a
superpositioned state.
As
exciting as Honeywell's achievement is, it's probably best not to get too
excited until the company properly details the computer. Last year, Google generated conflicting amounts of hype
and controversy when it announced that it had achieved quantum supremacy. IBM,
in particular, called the company's claims "indefensible" based on
the fact Google built Sycamore to solve one specific equation.
That
said, it appears most other companies are at least optimistic about what
Honeywell has managed to do. For instance, IBM's Research arm told Protocol, "Honeywell's paper
shows exciting new progress in programmable trapped-ion quantum systems."
The company has also gained the Microsoft seal of approval, with the two
announcing a partnership that will give Azure clients access to Honeywell's
quantum computer.
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