Quantum communication in Space
Keeping information secure in today’s interconnected world is becoming ever more important, so ESA is supporting efforts to ensure that future communications are kept confidential.
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Keeping information secure in today’s interconnected world is becoming ever more important, so ESA is supporting efforts to ensure that future communications are kept confidential.
Scientists discovered a speed limit that applies in the quantum world, determining minimum time for complex operations.
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound? Perhaps not, some say.
Take a look at this interesting video about quantum computers.
Google claims to have achieved quantum supremacy by using an experimental quantum computer, to perform a calculations faster than a regular computer.
Stanford physicists have developed a “quantum microphone” so sensitive that it can measure individual particles of sound, called phonons.
A quantum computer isn’t just a more powerful version of the computers we use today; it’s something else entirely, based on emerging scientific understanding — and more
IBM at “5 in 5” unveiled world’s smallest computer, that’s even smaller than a grain of salt.
A completely new architecture for quantum computing, based on what they’re calling ‘flip-flop qubits,’ invented.
Scientists by manipulating magnetic fields, managed to manipulate quantum materials into complex shapes, to advance the development of ultra-fast, stable quantum computers.