
Insider Brief A public-private partnership in the Mountain West announced today new results that mark steady progress toward the Department of Energy’s goal of fault-tolerant quantum computing, systems large and reliable enough to solve complex problems. Sandia National Laboratories, home to the DOE’s longest running quantum computing program, and tech company Quantinuum published a paper today in […]
The publication of peer-reviewed results validates the current advancements in trapped-ion quantum computing, marking a tangible milestone in the ongoing research and development efforts.
This development indicates concrete progress toward fault-tolerant quantum computing, which is essential for unlocking the full potential of quantum technology and its disruptive applications across various sectors.
The reported results provide increased confidence in the viability and scaling potential of trapped-ion quantum computing, potentially influencing investment and research priorities within the quantum ecosystem.
- · Quantinuum
- · Sandia National Laboratories
- · Quantum computing researchers
- · DOE funded projects
- · Quantum computing approaches with slower progress
- · Organizations not investing in advanced quantum research
Increased commercial and government interest in trapped-ion quantum computing as a leading contender for fault-tolerant systems.
Accelerated development and consolidation within the quantum computing industry as key technologies prove their efficacy.
The eventual emergence of practical, large-scale quantum computers capable of solving problems currently intractable for classical machines, impacting sectors like materials science, drug discovery, and cybersecurity.
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Read at The Quantum Insider