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Quantum Computer Built On Server Racks Paves the Way To Bigger Machines

vendredi 31 janvier 2025, 14:00 , par Slashdot
Quantum Computer Built On Server Racks Paves the Way To Bigger Machines
An anonymous reader quotes a report from MIT Technology Review: A Canadian startup called Xanadu has built a new quantum computer it says can be easily scaled up to achieve the computational power needed to tackle scientific challenges ranging from drug discovery to more energy-efficient machine learning. Aurora is a 'photonic' quantum computer, which means it crunches numbers using photonic qubits -- information encoded in light. In practice, this means combining and recombining laser beams on multiple chips using lenses, fibers, and other optics according to an algorithm. Xanadu's computer is designed in such a way that the answer to an algorithm it executes corresponds to the final number of photons in each laser beam. This approach differs from one used by Google and IBM, which involves encoding information in properties of superconducting circuits.

Aurora has a modular design that consists of four similar units, each installed in a standard server rack that is slightly taller and wider than the average human. To make a useful quantum computer, 'you copy and paste a thousand of these things and network them together,' says Christian Weedbrook, the CEO and founder of the company. Ultimately, Xanadu envisions a quantum computer as a specialized data center, consisting of rows upon rows of these servers. This contrasts with the industry's earlier conception of a specialized chip within a supercomputer, much like a GPU.

Xanadu's 12 qubits may seem like a paltry number next to IBM's 1,121, but Tiwari says this doesn't mean that quantum computers based on photonics are running behind. In his opinion, the number of qubits reflects the amount of investment more than it does the technology's promise. Xanadu's next goal is to improve the quality of the photons in the computer, which will ease the error correction requirements. 'When you send lasers through a medium, whether it's free space, chips, or fiber optics, not all the information makes it from the start to the finish,' he says. 'So you're actually losing light and therefore losing information.' The company is working to reduce this loss, which means fewer errors in the first place. Xanadu aims to build a quantum data center, with thousands of servers containing a million qubits, in 2029. The company published its work on chip design optimization and fabrication in the journal Nature.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/01/31/055235/quantum-computer-built-on-server-racks-paves-the-way...

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