A new study published in Nature demonstrates a significant breakthrough in quantum computing, where researchers successfully maintained quantum coherence in a multi-qubit system for over one minute at room temperature. This achievement, which involved a novel error-correction protocol and advanced material engineering, marks a critical step toward practical quantum computers that can operate outside of …
A new study published in Nature demonstrates a significant breakthrough in quantum computing, where researchers successfully maintained quantum coherence in a multi-qubit system for over one minute at room temperature. This achievement, which involved a novel error-correction protocol and advanced material engineering, marks a critical step toward practical quantum computers that can operate outside of specialized, ultra-cold laboratory environments. The research team from a leading university emphasizes that while scaling the technology remains a formidable challenge, this milestone addresses one of the field’s most persistent obstacles: the fragility of quantum states. The findings could accelerate developments in materials science, cryptography, and complex system simulation. Read the full article for detailed methodology and expert commentary.
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