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This article lists the companies worldwide engaged in the development of quantum computing, quantum communication and quantum sensing. Quantum computing and communication are two sub-fields of quantum information science , which describes and theorizes information science in terms of quantum physics .
In quantum information theory, quantum discord is a measure of nonclassical correlations between two subsystems of a quantum system. It includes correlations that are due to quantum physical effects but do not necessarily involve quantum entanglement .
The Quantum AI Lab was announced by Google Research in a blog post on May 16, 2013. [1] [3] [4] At the time of launch, the Lab was using the most advanced commercially available quantum computer, D-Wave Two from D-Wave Systems. [1] [3] On October 10, 2013, Google released a short film describing the current state of the Quantum AI Lab. [5] [6]
The director of Google's Quantum AI lab, Hartmut Neven, told the BBC that commercial applications for a quantum computing chip would still not be available before 2030, at the earliest.
Google on Monday said that it has overcome a key challenge in quantum computing with a new generation of chip, solving a computing problem in five minutes that would take a classical computer more ...
In ORNL's quantum labs, physicists create entangled photon pairs and send them across a network of cables to test their ability to carry information. The lab hosted the first Southeastern Quantum ...
Neuromorphic quantum computing (abbreviated as ‘n.quantum computing’) is an unconventional computing type of computing that uses neuromorphic computing to perform quantum operations. It was suggested that quantum algorithms, which are algorithms that run on a realistic model of quantum computation, can be computed equally efficiently with ...
John M. Martinis (born 1958) is an American physicist and a professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara.In 2014, the Google Quantum A.I. Lab announced that it had hired Martinis and his team in a multimillion dollar deal to build a quantum computer using superconducting qubits.