A new study published in Nature demonstrates a significant advance in quantum computing, achieving a record 99.9% fidelity in two-qubit gate operations using silicon spin qubits. This milestone, reached by researchers at a leading university, marks a critical step toward building scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computers. The team utilized electron spins in quantum dots fabricated on …
A new study published in Nature demonstrates a significant advance in quantum computing, achieving a record 99.9% fidelity in two-qubit gate operations using silicon spin qubits. This milestone, reached by researchers at a leading university, marks a critical step toward building scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computers. The team utilized electron spins in quantum dots fabricated on a silicon chip, a platform compatible with existing semiconductor manufacturing techniques. The high-fidelity operations reduce error rates substantially, bringing practical quantum computing closer to reality by addressing one of the field’s core challenges. The research suggests silicon-based quantum processors could be a viable path forward for large-scale quantum systems. Read the full article for technical details and expert commentary.
Join the Club
Like this story? You’ll love our Bi-Weekly Newsletter



