391 Results From "quantum computing"

IBM figured out how to use a quantum computer to make machine learning algorithms better than ever before. But no quantum computer is good enough yet.
Machine Learning

Why IBM Thinks Quantum Computers Will Boost Machine Learning

Russian physicists, armed with a quantum computer, managed to send a single electron back in time, resetting the computer to its state from a moment earlier
Physics

Russian Scientists Used a Quantum Computer to Turn Back Time

A team of Japanese scientists simulated 4,000 entirely new universes to try and understand what happened in the earliest moments of ours.
Science & Energy

Scientists Simulate Thousands of New Universes to Understand How Ours Began

A new research project aims to harness the power of the quantum computer to build a new type of neural network that "acts like a brain."
Artificial Intelligence

Scientists Are Building a Quantum Computer That “Acts Like a Brain”

Collecting parts to build a functioning quantum computer is so difficult, and expensive, it might slow down development of the technology as a whole.
Computers

Sourcing Parts for Quantum Computers is Near-Impossible Right Now

In a new paper, an international team of quantum physicists argue that thanks to the unusual rules of quantum mechanics, reality is actually be subjective.
Quantum Physics

Bizarre New Quantum Research: Reality Itself May Be Subjective

IBM has unveiled a sleek, and sexy commercial quantum computer called the IBM Q System One at this year's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.
Physics

IBM Just Unveiled Its First Commercial Quantum Computer

Now, Motherboard reports, MIT students are calling for the termination of a third academic associated with Epstein — this one even closer to the financier.
Future Society

Students Demand MIT Fire Prof Who Visited Epstein in Prison

Researchers have built a quantum gate incorporating qudits as opposed to qubits — and it could help usher in the era of quantum computing.
Quantum Physics

Forget Qubits — Scientists Just Built a Quantum Gate With Qudits

For the first time, scientists generated entangled radiation using a mechanical object. They're describing it as the first step toward a quantum internet.
Physics

Scientists: Entangled Radiation May Help Build “Quantum Internet”

Columbia University astronomer David Kipping argues that there's about a 50-50 chance we are living inside a simulation, but we don't know for sure.
Science & Energy

Columbia Professor: There’s a 50% Chance We’re Living in a Simulation

By stacking two layers of graphene, physicists produced entirely new quantum states that they think might help overcome a major hurdle to quantum computers.
Graphene

Stacking Graphene Creates Entirely New Quantum States

Researchers have created a version of an MRI machine that's so scaled down, it can capture detailed images of individual atoms.
Quantum Physics

World’s Smallest MRI Machine Means We Can Now Scan Individual Atoms

Congress has passed a $1.2 billion quantum computing bill designed to accelerate U.S. research into the nascent technology.
Quantum Computing

Congress Passes $1.2 Billion Quantum Computing Bill

Stanford researchers have developed a "quantum microphone" that is so sensitive, it can measure individual particles of sound, otherwise known as "phonons."
Quantum Physics

This “Quantum Microphone” Can Listen to a Single Sound Particle

For the first time, scientists managed to capture photographic evidence that two photons were linked by quantum entanglement.
Physics

Scientists Capture First-Ever Image of Quantum Entanglement

A team of scientists from the universities of Alberta and Toronto have laid out the "blueprints" for a "quantum battery" that never loses its charge.
Quantum Computing

This “Quantum Battery” Never Loses Its Charge

According to a new report, it could take 20 years for quantum-safe encryption to become mainstream. And that's bad news.
Hacking

Researchers: Quantum Computers Could Become Ultimate Hacking Tool

Not only are quantum jumps predictable, they can also be reversed, according to a new Yale study that could benefit quantum computing research.
Physics

Scientists Predict Quantum Jumps, Turning Physics on Its Head

Scientists developed a working model for a bizarre state of matter called "strange metals," and discovered that they behave similar to black holes.
Physics

Cornell Scientists Say “Strange Metals” Are Similar to Black Holes