Duke Quantum Center researchers use a neutral-atom platform to simulate unusual localization effects that could underpin robust quantum information storage.
Quantum computer research is advancing at a rapid pace. Today's devices, however, still have significant limitations: For example, the length of a quantum computation is severely limited—that is, the ...
In the everyday world, governed by classical physics, the concept of equilibrium reigns. If you put a drop of ink into water, ...
When a molecule absorbs light, it undergoes a whirlwind of quantum-mechanical transformations. Electrons jump between energy levels, atoms vibrate, and chemical bonds shift—all within millionths of a ...
Richard Feynman, the iconic physicist and one of the progenitors of quantum computing, famously said in 1981: “Nature isn’t classical, dammit, and if you want to make a simulation of nature, you’d ...
Four RIKEN researchers have used two small quantum computers to simulate quantum information scrambling, an important quantum-information process. This achievement illustrates a potential application ...
Quantum simulations are pushing physicists to rethink what it means for an atom to move. In new work on a quantum computer, ...
SQC's Founder and CEO, Michelle Simmons, said: "Quantum Twins represents a window into the quantum world that customers can use for materials discovery today. The enabler is that we can engineer ...