Google achieves revolutionary quantum chip milestone, solves in 5 minutes problems that would take current supercomputers 10 quadrillion years
- Google has achieved a revolutionary quantum chip milestone.
- The new quantum chip solves problems in 5 minutes that would take current supercomputers 10 quadrillion years.
- This breakthrough sets a new standard for computational power.
- The advancement signifies a pivotal moment in the field of quantum technology.
329 Articles
329 Articles
Inside Google's quantum computing breakthrough
This week, Google announced that its new state-of-the-art quantum chip, Willow, could perform a computation in under five minutes that would otherwise take one of today’s fastest supercomputers 10 septillion years to solve. (For the record: that’s 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years.) “This mind-boggling number exceeds known timescales in physics and vastly exceeds the age of the universe,” Google’s researchers wrote. “It lends credence to …
Complicated tasks that would take longer to figure out than the universe existed should now be able to take five minutes. That's the promise of Google's new quantum computer chip Willow. “There's constant progress being made, milestones being passed,” said Frank Wilczek, professor of theoretical physics at MIT.
Google unveils Willow, the world's fastest quantum chip, to revolutionise supercomputing
Google has made headlines in the world of advanced computing by introducing its new supercomputer chip called Willow, which is being hailed as the fastest quantum computing chip ever created. The announcement was made by Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Google, on his social media account, and even drew interest from Elon Musk, who responded to Pichai’s post. Google claims that this chip can tackle incredibly complicated calculations in no time at all.…
Google claims major quantum computing breakthrough with 'Willow'
Google is touting the development of a new quantum chip it calls "Willow" that the California online search giant said will bring consumers closer to using quantum devices whose capabilities far outdo existing technology.
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