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 100 microseconds. This marks a tenfold improvement over previous benchmarks and was achieved using a novel error-correction protocol combined with advanced cryogenic control systems. The extended coherence time is a …
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 100 microseconds. This marks a tenfold improvement over previous benchmarks and was achieved using a novel error-correction protocol combined with advanced cryogenic control systems. The extended coherence time is a critical step toward building practical, fault-tolerant quantum computers capable of solving complex problems in materials science and cryptography. The research team, led by Dr. Alina Chen, emphasizes that while scaling the technology remains a challenge, this milestone proves key theoretical concepts about error suppression are experimentally viable. For the full details and technical analysis, read the complete article at https://sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/10/quantum-coherence-record.
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