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A new quantum computer breaks Google’s quantum supremacy record by 100-fold

A new quantum computer breaks Google’s quantum supremacy record by 100-fold

WHAT JUST HAPPENED? In 2019, Google’s Sycamore quantum computer achieved a so-called quantum supremacy record by completing a specific task in 200 seconds that would have taken a classical supercomputer 10,000 years to finish. There was a bit of controversy around this achievement, but by and large, Google’s claim has withstood the test of time – until now. Last month, a company called Quantinuum said it reached an error correction performance threshold that many believed was years away.

A new 56-qubit H2-1 computer has dislodged Google’s Sycamore quantum computer from its ‘quantum supremacy’ record by 100-fold.

 

The company published its results last month in a study uploaded to the preprint database arXiv. The study has not been peer-reviewed yet.

According to Quantinuum, the H2-1 configured with 32 physical qubits supported the creation of four highly reliable logical qubits operating at “better than break-even” – representing a major step towards fault-tolerant quantum computing. This means the logical qubits are more reliable than the physical qubits they’re composed of, which is a crucial threshold for practical quantum error correction.

Quantinuum maintains that it has demonstrated a significant performance improvement using the Random Circuit Sampling algorithm. It achieved an estimated linear cross entropy benchmark (XEB) score of ~0.35, over 100 times better than previous demonstrations.

That title now belongs to a computing company called Quantinuum, which ran multiple experiments on its quantum computer between January and June 2024. It claims that its machine hit an error correction performance threshold that many experts believed was still years away.

 

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