Thursday, March 6, 2025

Scientists Just Made the Most Accurate Clock Even Better




UCLA physicists have developed a new thin film that uses far less of the rare thorium-229 while also being significantly less radioactive, making it a safer and more practical alternative for atomic clocks.

  • Atomic clocks using thorium-229 nuclei excited by laser beams could provide the most precise measurements of time and gravity ever recorded, potentially reshaping fundamental physics.
  • Traditional thorium-229-doped crystals are both rare and radioactive, limiting their practicality.
  • The newly developed thin film, made from a dry precursor of thorium-229, demonstrates the same nuclear excitation as the crystal but with significant advantages.
  • Its lower cost, reduced radioactivity, and smaller size make it easier to produce at scale, paving the way for smaller, more affordable, and highly portable atomic clocks.
Unlocking the Power of Thorium-229

This summer, UCLA physicists achieved a long-sought breakthrough: they successfully made the nucleus of a thorium-229 atom, embedded in a transparent crystal, absorb and emit photons  just like an atom’s electrons do. This achievement confirms what scientists had speculated for decades. By using a laser to excite the nucleus, researchers could develop atomic clocks with unprecedented accuracy, leading to more precise measurements of time and gravity. Such advancements might even challenge some of the fundamental principles of physics.

However, there’s a challenge  thorium-229-doped crystals are both rare and radioactive. To address this, a team of UCLA chemists and physicists, in a study published in Nature, developed thin films made from a thorium-229 precursor. These films use significantly less thorium-229 and emit radiation comparable to that of a banana, making them far safer and more practical.

Crucially, they demonstrated that these films still allow for the same laser-driven nuclear excitation required for a nuclear clock. With scalable production, these films could not only revolutionize atomic clocks but also enable new applications in quantum optics.

A Revolutionary Method for Thorium Thin Films

Instead of embedding a pure thorium atom in a fluorine-based crystal, the new method uses a dry nitrate parent material of thorium-229 dissolved in ultrapure water and pipetted into a crucible. The addition of hydrogen fluoride yields a few micrograms of thorium-229 precipitate that is separated from the water and heated until it evaporates and condenses unevenly on transparent sapphire and magnesium fluoride surfaces.

Light from a vacuum ultraviolet laser system was directed at the targets, where it excited the nuclear state as reported in earlier UCLA research, and the subsequent photons emitted by the nucleus were collected.

The Key to a More Stable Clock

“A key advantage to using a parent material  thorium fluoride  is that all the thorium nuclei are in the same local atomic environments and experience the same electric field at the nuclei,” said co-author and Charles W. Clifford Jr. professor of chemistry and biochemistry, and professor of materials science and engineering at UCLA, Anastassia Alexandrova. “This makes all thorium exhibit the same excitation energies, making for a stable and more accurate clock. In this way, the material is unique.”

Redefining Time with a Nuclear Oscillator

At the heart of every clock is an oscillator. The clock operates by defining time as how long it takes for the oscillator to undergo a certain number of oscillations. In a grandfather clock, a second may be defined as the time for the pendulum to go back and forth once; in the quartz oscillator of a wristwatch, it is typically about 32,0000 vibrations of the crystal.

In a thorium nuclear clock, a second is about 2,020,407,300,000,000 excitation and relaxation cycles of the nucleus. This higher tick rate can make the clock more precise, provided the tick rate is stable; if the tick rate changes, the clock will mismeasure time. The thin films described in this work provide a stable environment for the nucleus that is both easily constructed and has the potential to be harnessed to produce microfabricated devices. This could allow widespread use of nuclear clocks as it makes them cheaper and easier to produce.

The Path to a Smaller, More Accurate Clock

Existing atomic clocks based on electrons are room-sized contraptions with vacuum chambers to trap atoms and equipment associated with cooling. A thorium-based nuclear clock would be much smaller, more robust, more portable and more accurate.

Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe

Above and beyond commercial applications, the new nuclear spectroscopy could pull back the curtain on some of the universe’s biggest mysteries. Sensitive measurement of an atom’s nucleus opens up a new way to learn about its properties and interactions with energy and the environment. This, in turn, will let scientists test some of their most fundamental ideas about matter, energy and the laws of space and time.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Astronomers Trace Fast Radio Burst to a Distant, Deep-Space Galaxy


The burst's host galaxy is more than halfway across the observable universe and up to 100 times fainter than other host galaxies.



Astronomers have traced a fast radio burst (FRB) back to its origin, and what they've found is unlike any other FRB host previously discovered. The signal appears to have come from a tiny dwarf galaxy more than halfway across the observable universe, making it at least 46 billion light-years from Earth. This incredible distance and the galaxy's small but mighty stature bring researchers a little closer to understanding how fRBs come to fruition.

FRBs are brief but highly intense bursts of energy detected in radio-wave frequencies. Though short-lived, these electromagnetic eruptions are often powerful enough to outshine entire galaxies. This alone is strange enough to warrant investigation, but FRBs might also have something to teach astronomers about the evolution of the universe and the properties of the intergalactic medium, by which they're sometimes distorted as they travel. They also lead astronomers to "new" host galaxies, as FRB 20190208A has done.

An international team of astronomers first detected FRB 20190208A in February 2019. Using radio telescopes, the team observed the burst for just under 66 hours, then caught it again in February 2021 and August 2023. This meant FRB 20190208A was a repeating FRB, the likes of which were only discovered half a decade ago.

FRB 20190208A's persistent pops allowed the astronomers to track down its origin, and then use optical telescopes to scope out the area. At first, they struggled to find a galaxy from which the burst might have originated. Then, on closer examination, they found a "faint smudge" in deep space. The smudge was a small and faint dwarf galaxy, and while the team hasn't yet nailed down its exact distance from Earth, they estimate that it sits at least halfway across the observable universe. That would make the host galaxy 46 billion light-years from Earth at minimum, though that doesn't mean FRB 20190208A traveled for so long; accounting for the expansion of the universe, the astronomers think the burst traveled for some 7 billion years.

Though the exact cause of FRBs has been difficult to nab, scientists think they're formed by a type of neutron star called a magnetar, whose powerful magnetic field snaps in a sudden burst of energy. Strangely, repeating FRBs like FRB 20190208A seem to be more strongly associated with dwarf galaxies than with larger galaxies, suggesting that the former provide an optimal environment for magnetars and potentially other FRB sources that astronomers haven't yet tracked down.

"Finding repeating FRB sources in dwarf galaxies thus potentially links these repeating FRB sources with massive star progenitors," Danté Hewitt, a radio astronomer involved in the research, told ScienceAlert. "It's a little poetic. When the most massive stars die, they unleash some of the most energetic explosions in the universe; and then maybe, the remnants of those explosions continue to scream into the void, repeatedly producing FRBs."

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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Tuesday, March 4, 2025

Inside the Proton: The Most Intense Forces in the Universe, Revealed



Scientists have achieved an incredible feat mapping the forces inside a proton with extreme precision, uncovering the immense forces that hold quarks together.

Using lattice quantum chromodynamics, researchers have created what is likely the smallest force field map ever generated. Their findings reveal astonishingly powerful interactions, akin to the weight of 10 elephants squeezed into a space smaller than an atomic nucleus.

Mapping the Forces Inside a Proton

Scientists have successfully mapped the forces inside a proton, revealing in unprecedented detail how quarks the tiny particles within react when struck by high-energy photons.

The research, led by an international team including experts from the University of Adelaide, aims to deepen our understanding of the fundamental forces that shape the natural world.

Using Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics to Simulate Forces

“We have used a powerful computational technique called lattice quantum chromodynamics to map the forces acting inside a proton,” said Associate Professor Ross Young, Associate Head of Learning and Teaching, School of Physics, Chemistry and Earth Sciences, who is part of the team.

“This approach breaks down space and time into a fine grid, allowing us to simulate how the strong force the fundamental interaction that binds quarks into protons and neutrons varies across different regions inside the proton.”

Creating the Smallest-Ever Force Field Map

The team’s result is possibly the smallest-ever force field map of nature ever generated. They have published their findings in the journal Physical Review Letters.

University of Adelaide PhD student, Joshua Crawford’s calculations led the work together with the University of Adelaide team and international collaborators.

Revealing Immense Forces at Tiny Scales

“Our findings reveal that even at these minuscule scales, the forces involved are immense, reaching up to half a million Newtons, the equivalent of about 10 elephants, compressed within a space far smaller than an atomic nucleus,” said Joshua.

“These force maps provide a new way to understand the intricate internal dynamics of the proton, helping to explain why it behaves as it does in high-energy collisions, such as those at the Large Hadron Collider, and in experiments probing the fundamental structure of matter.”

The Role of the Large Hadron Collider

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world’s largest and highest-energy particle accelerator. It was built by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in collaboration with over 10,000 scientists and hundreds of universities and laboratories across more than 100 countries. The LHC’s goal is to allow physicists to test the predictions of different theories of particle physics.

How Fundamental Research Advances Science

“Edison didn’t invent the light bulb by researching brighter candles he built on generations of scientists who studied how light interacts with matter,” said Associate Professor Young.

“In much the same way, modern research such as our recent work is revealing how the fundamental building blocks of matter behave when struck by light, deepening our understanding of nature at its most basic level.

Proton Research and Future Applications

“As researchers continue to unravel the proton’s inner structure, greater insight may help refine how we use protons in cutting-edge technologies.

“One prominent example is proton therapy, which uses high-energy protons to precisely target tumors while minimising damage to surrounding tissue.

Shaping the Future of Science and Medicine

“Just as early breakthroughs in understanding light paved the way for modern lasers and imaging, advancing our knowledge of proton structure could shape the next generation of applications in science and medicine.

“By making the invisible forces inside the proton visible for the first time, this study bridges the gap between theory and experiment just as earlier generations uncovered the secrets of light to transform the modern world.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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Saturday, March 1, 2025

Bubbles That Defy Physics: Scientists Uncover a Mind-Blowing New Phenomenon




Shaken bubbles move sideways in a surprising galloping motion, opening new possibilities for technology and science.

A team led by researchers at UNC-Chapel Hill has made an extraordinary discovery that is reshaping our understanding of bubbles and their movement. Imagine tiny air bubbles inside a liquid-filled container. When the container is shaken up and down, these bubbles exhibit an unexpected, rhythmic “galloping” motion bouncing like playful horses and moving horizontally, despite the vertical shaking. This counterintuitive phenomenon, revealed in a new study, has significant technological implications, from improving surface cleaning and heat transfer in microchips to advancing space applications.

These galloping bubbles are already drawing significant attention. Their impact on fluid dynamics was recently recognized with an award for their video entry at the latest Gallery of Fluid Motion, organized by the American Physical Society.

“Our research not only answers a fundamental scientific question but also inspires curiosity and exploration of the fascinating, unseen world of fluid motion,” said Pedro Sáenz, principal investigator and professor of applied mathematics at UNC-Chapel Hill. “After all, the smallest things can sometimes lead to the biggest changes.”

Future Innovations and Real-World Applications

Bubbles play a key role in a vast range of everyday processes, from the fizz in soft drinks to climate regulation and industrial applications such as cooling systems, water treatment, and chemical production.

Controlling bubble movement has long been a challenge across multiple fields, but this study introduces an entirely new method: leveraging a fluid instability to direct bubbles in precise ways.

One immediate application is in cooling systems for microchips. On Earth, buoyancy naturally removes bubbles from heated surfaces, preventing overheating. However, in microgravity environments such as space, there is no buoyancy, making bubble removal a major issue. This newly discovered method allows bubbles to be actively removed without relying on gravity, which can enable improved heat transfer in satellites and space-based electronics.

Another breakthrough is in surface cleaning. Proof-of-concept experiments show that ‘galloping bubbles’ can clean dusty surfaces by bouncing and zigzagging across them, like a tiny Roomba. The ability to manipulate bubble motion in this way could lead to innovations in industrial cleaning and biomedical applications such as targeted drug delivery.

“The newly discovered self-propulsion mechanism allows bubbles to travel distances and gives them an unprecedented capacity to navigate intricate fluid networks,” said Saiful Tamim, joint first author and postdoctoral research assistant at UNC-Chapel Hill. “This could offer solutions to long-standing challenges in heat transfer, surface cleaning, and even inspire new soft robotic systems.”

A Leap Forward in Bubble Research

Bubbles have fascinated scientists for centuries. Leonardo da Vinci was among the first to document their erratic paths, describing how they spiral unpredictably rather than rising straight up. Until now, controlling bubble motion has remained a challenge, with available approaches being few and lacking versatility. This new research changes that perspective, demonstrating that bubbles can be guided along predictable paths using carefully tuned vibrations.

“It’s fascinating to see something as simple as a bubble reveal such complex and surprising behavior,” said Jian Hui Guan, joint first author and postdoctoral research assistant at UNC-Chapel Hill. “By harnessing a new method to move bubbles, we’ve unlocked possibilities for innovation in fields ranging from microfluidics to heat transfer.”

The discovery of galloping bubbles represents a significant leap forward in our understanding of bubble dynamics, with implications stretching across industries. As researchers continue to explore and refine this phenomenon, the world may soon see new technologies that harness the power of these tiny, acrobatic bubbles.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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Friday, February 28, 2025

Physicists Discover a Magnetic Breakthrough That Could Supercharge Quantum Tech




Scientists have found a new way to control quantum information using a special material, chromium sulfide bromide.

It can store and process data in multiple forms, but its magnetic properties are the real game-changer. By adjusting its magnetization, researchers can confine excitons quantum particles that carry information allowing for longer-lasting quantum states and new ways to process data.

Quantum “Miracle Material” Enables Magnetic Switching

A newly identified quantum “miracle material” may enable magnetic switching, according to researchers from the University of Regensburg and the University of Michigan.

This discovery could lead to advancements in quantum computing, sensing, and other technologies. Previous studies found that quantum particles called excitons can sometimes be restricted to a single line within the material, chromium sulfide bromide. The new research provides both theoretical and experimental evidence linking this confinement to the material’s magnetic properties.

Chromium sulfide bromide is particularly exciting for quantum research because it can encode information in multiple ways: through electric charge, light (photons), magnetism (electron spins), and vibrations (phonons).

“The long-term vision is, you could potentially build quantum machines or devices that use these three or even all four of these properties: photons to transfer information, electrons to process information through their interactions, magnetism to store information, and phonons to modulate and transduce information to new frequencies,” said Mackillo Kira, U-M professor of electrical and computer engineering.

Harnessing Excitons for Quantum Encoding

One of the ways chromium sulfide bromide could encode quantum information is in excitons. An exciton forms when an electron is moved out of its “ground” energy state in the semiconductor into a higher energy state, leaving behind a “hole.” The electron and hole are paired together, and that collective state is an exciton.

The excitons are trapped in single layers by chromium sulfide bromide’s unusual magnetic properties. The material is made up of layers just a few atoms thick, like molecular phyllo pastry. At low temperatures under 132 Kelvin (-222 Fahrenheit), the layers are magnetized the spins of the electrons align with one another. The direction of the magnetic field switches to the opposite direction from one layer to the next. This is an antiferromagnetic structure.

Above 132 Kelvin, the material isn’t magnetized the heat keeps the electron spins from staying aligned, so they point in random directions. In the unmagnetized state, the excitons aren’t trapped but extend over multiple atomic layers, making them three-dimensional. They can also move in any direction.

Quantum Confinement and Longevity of Information

When the antiferromagnetic structure confines excitons to a single atomic layer, the excitons are further restricted to a single line a single dimension because they can easily move along only one of the two axes of the plane. In a quantum device, this confinement helps quantum information last longer because the excitons are less likely to collide with one another and lose the information they carry.

“The magnetic order is a new tuning knob for shaping excitons and their interactions. This could be a game changer for future electronics and information technology,” said Rupert Huber, professor of physics at the University of Regensburg in Germany.

Excitons’ Fine Structure: A Surprising Discovery

The experimental team, led by Huber, produced excitons inside a sample of chromium sulfide bromide by hitting it with pulses of infrared light just 20 quadrillionths of a second long. Then, they used another infrared laser with less energetic pulses to nudge the excitons into slightly higher energy states. In this way, they discovered that there are two variations of the excitons with surprisingly different energies—when normally, they would have identical energies. This splitting of an energy state is known as fine structure.

The team also explored how the material varies in space by shooting those less energetic pulses along two different axes within the material to probe the inner structures of excitons. This approach revealed the highly direction-dependent excitons, which could either be confined to a line or expanded in three dimensions. These configurations can be adjusted based on the magnetic states, switchable through external magnetic fields or temperature changes.

A New Pathway for Quantum Information Processing

“Since the electronic, photonic, and spin degrees of freedom are strongly intertwined, switching between a magnetized and a nonmagnetized state could serve as an extremely fast way to convert photon and spin-based quantum information,” said Matthias Florian, U-M research investigator in electrical and computer engineering and co-first author with Marlene Liebich, a Ph.D. candidate in physics at the University of Regensburg.

The theory team, led by Kira, explained these results with quantum many-body calculations. The calculations used the structure of the material to systematically predict the exceptionally large fine-structure splitting in the magnetically ordered material and the transitions between the two exciton states when the material transitioned in and out of magnetic order. They also confirmed that the transition from one-dimensional to three-dimensional excitons accounted for the substantial changes observed in how long excitons could go without colliding, as the larger and more mobile excitons have more opportunities to collide.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.

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Thursday, February 27, 2025

Physicists find unexpected crystals of electrons in new ultrathin material




MIT physicists report the unexpected discovery of electrons forming crystalline structures in a material only billionths of a meter thick. The work adds to a gold mine of discoveries originating from the material, which the same team discovered only about three years ago.

In a paper published Jan. 22 in Nature, the team describes how electrons in devices made, in part, of the new material can become solid, or form crystals, by changing the voltage applied to the devices when they are kept at a temperature similar to that of outer space. Under the same conditions, they also showed the emergence of two new electronic states that add to work they reported last year showing that electrons can split into fractions of themselves.

The physicists were able to make the discoveries thanks to new custom-made filters for better insulation of the equipment involved in the work. These allowed them to cool their devices to a temperature an order of magnitude colder than they achieved for the earlier results.

The team also observed all of these phenomena using two slightly different "versions" of the new material, one composed of five layers of atomically thin carbon; the other composed of four layers. This indicates "that there's a family of materials where you can get this kind of behavior, which is exciting," says Long Ju, an assistant professor in the MIT Department of Physics who led the work. Ju is also affiliated with MIT's Materials Research Laboratory and Research Lab of Electronics.

Referring to the new material, known as rhombohedral pentalayer graphene, Ju says, "We found a gold mine, and every scoop is revealing something new."

New material


Rhombohedral pentalayer graphene is essentially a special form of pencil lead. Pencil lead, or graphite, is composed of graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in hexagons resembling a honeycomb structure. Rhombohedral pentalayer graphene is composed of five layers of graphene stacked in a specific overlapping order.

Since Ju and colleagues discovered the material, they have tinkered with it by adding layers of another material they thought might accentuate the graphene's properties, or even produce new phenomena. For example, in 2023 they created a sandwich of rhombohedral pentalayer graphene with "buns" made of hexagonal boron nitride. By applying different voltages, or amounts of electricity, to the sandwich, they discovered three important properties never before seen in natural graphite.

Last year, Ju and colleagues reported yet another important and even more surprising phenomenon: Electrons became fractions of themselves upon applying a current to a new device composed of rhombohedral pentalayer graphene and hexagonal boron nitride.

This is important because this "fractional quantum Hall effect" has only been seen in a few systems, usually under very high magnetic fields. The Ju work showed that the phenomenon could occur in a fairly simple material without a magnetic field. As a result, it is called the "fractional quantum anomalous Hall effect" (anomalous indicates that no magnetic field is necessary).

New results


In the current work, the Ju team reports yet more unexpected phenomena from the general rhombohedral graphene/boron nitride system when it is cooled to 30 millikelvins (1 millikelvin is equivalent to -459.668 degrees Fahrenheit). In last year's paper, Ju and colleagues reported six fractional states of electrons. In the current work, they report discovering two more of these fractional states.

They also found another unusual electronic phenomenon: the integer quantum anomalous Hall effect in a wide range of electron densities. The fractional quantum anomalous Hall effect was understood to emerge in an electron "liquid" phase, analogous to water. In contrast, the new state that the team has now observed can be interpreted as an electron "solid" phase resembling the formation of electronic "ice"—that can also coexist with the fractional quantum anomalous Hall states when the system's voltage is carefully tuned at ultra-low temperatures.

One way to think about the relation between the integer and fractional states is to imagine a map created by tuning electric voltages: By tuning the system with different voltages, you can create a "landscape" similar to a river (which represents the liquid-like fractional states) cutting through glaciers (which represent the solid-like integer effect), Ju explains.

Ju notes that his team observed all of these phenomena not only in pentalayer rhombohedral graphene, but also in rhombohedral graphene composed of four layers. This creates a family of materials, and indicates that other "relatives" may exist.

"This work shows how rich this material is in exhibiting exotic phenomena. We've just added more flavor to this already very interesting material," says Zhengguang Lu, a co-first author of the paper. Lu, who conducted the work as a postdoc at MIT, is now on the faculty at Florida State University.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Microsoft announces giant leap in quantum computing



Majorana 1 has emerged as a bold stride in quantum computing. It arrives at a time when many researchers are exploring faster, smaller, and more dependable ways to handle quantum information.

Chetan Nayak, Microsoft technical fellow and Corporate Vice President of Quantum Hardware at Microsoft, has highlighted the significance of creating a stable quantum system that can adapt to large-scale needs.

His team has worked on a new “topoconductor,” a special class of material that supports unique behaviors not seen in ordinary matter.

Majorana 1 qubits reduce errors


Majorana 1 is built around Majorana zero modes, which store data through electric charge parity. Developers say these modes offer a path to lower error rates, since the system can effectively hide and protect the information.

Each qubit in this design operates with digital pulses instead of delicate analog control. This lets engineers run error correction more directly, which is critical for tasks that involve many qubits.

What sets ‘topoconductors’ apart


Scientists at Microsoft discovered a way to fuse superconductors with semiconductors in a design involving indium arsenide and aluminum. Their approach relies on extremely low temperatures to form stable wires.

These wires enable a new state of matter known as a topological superconductor. It gives the system extra resilience, which helps sustain quantum states for more reliable operations.

Majorana 1’s improves scalability


Engineers aim to move quantum computing beyond small demonstrations. Microsoft’s topological strategy addresses that by integrating error protection directly into hardware. Some existing qubits require fine-tuned signals that are hard to scale. By shifting to measurements for computation, developers reduce overhead and open the door to running many qubits at once.

One path to fewer errors


A common hurdle in quantum computing is noise that throws off sensitive qubit states. With topological qubits, the physical structure naturally guards them, so fewer corrections are needed in software.

Researchers say their design might handle trillions of operations on a million qubits without overwhelming control complexity. Simpler signals mean less hardware per qubit, which could shrink the size of future machines.

Acknowledgment from defense agencies


Microsoft’s approach drew attention from DARPA. That agency runs programs like the Underexplored Systems for Utility-Scale Quantum Computing, which looks for promising hardware that might solve tasks beyond the ability of regular machines.

Microsoft is now among a select group advancing in DARPA’s evaluation. This backing sends a strong sign of confidence in a system that merges academic theory with commercial viability.

Digital pulses for measurements


The Majorana 1 processor merges measurement-based methods with data readout using a quantum dot, a tiny component that tracks electron charges. This design has shown it can detect a difference of one extra electron with high reliability.

Microsoft suggests this technique allows qubits to switch on and off through voltage adjustments. It avoids the frequent recalibration that can slow systems relying on analog drives.

Glimpse into practical uses


When quantum systems can handle vast numbers of qubits, they might shed light on puzzling chemistry questions. This includes analyzing how different bonds form or how materials break down, which could speed up research into new forms of construction or pollution control.

Experts see potential applications in fields like medicine and agriculture, particularly when joined with artificial intelligence. Machine learning models could pair with quantum computers to explore better enzyme designs and faster drug discovery.

Beyond the lab


Although certain steps remain before consumers notice quantum advantages in daily life, the progress seems brisk. Engineers must finalize cooling methods and expand the software environment that coordinates qubit operations. All of this occurs at subzero temperatures. Still, the push to bring these solutions into mainstream data centers suggests that we may see real impacts sooner than many once predicted.

“We took a step back and said ‘OK, let’s invent the transistor for the quantum age’” said Chetan Nayak. His statement underscores how they looked for a long-term approach rather than a quick fix.

Majorana 1 and existing tools


The Majorana 1 chip functions as part of a larger toolkit that includes a dilution refrigerator and specialized control logic. Each piece plays a role in running quantum algorithms, which are programs that leverage quantum phenomena to tackle problems regular computers cannot handle efficiently.

Engineers must continue refining the material layers to minimize defects. Their success may pave the way for the next phase of computing, where topological hardware handles specialized tasks more efficiently.

Problem solving with Majorana 1


With eight topological qubits already placed on a single device, the vision of a large-scale quantum machine seems more tangible. One reason for optimism is the built-in error protection that underpins each step, which might reduce overhead in future expansions. Developers plan to create robust prototypes that solve real-world challenges without indefinite years of waiting.

They also highlight a focus on industrial-scale impact, hinting that this technology could address large, complex simulations. Researchers have long searched for stable platforms to run quantum operations. By anchoring the system in strong materials science, teams hope to turn topological qubits into practical tools. Those behind Majorana 1 emphasize that scalability is key for solving meaningful problems. The ability to coordinate many qubits is poised to unlock scenarios previously confined to theoretical speculation.

Website: International Conference on High Energy Physics and Computational Science.


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