
Breakthrough brings quantum computing closer to large-scale practical use
Researchers at Oxford University have reached a major milestone in quantum computing by developing a scalable quantum supercomputer capable of quantum teleportation.
A solution to the scalability problem
The breakthrough addresses the long-standing scalability problem of quantum computing, with scientists claiming it could pave the way for next-generation technology on an industry-disrupting level.
While quantum computing has been a field of study for decades, only recently have significant advancements been made toward making it practical on a large scale.
By leveraging the unique properties of quantum physics, quantum computers replace traditional bits—binary ‘ones’ and ‘zeros’—with quantum bits (qubits). Unlike classical bits, qubits can exist in both states simultaneously due to a phenomenon called superposition.
This allows quantum computers to perform calculations at speeds that are orders of magnitude faster than even the most advanced supercomputers using conventional technology.
First demonstration of quantum teleportation of logical gates
While previous studies have demonstrated quantum teleportation—transferring data between two locations without physically moving qubits—this is the first time scientists have teleported logical gates. Logical gates are the fundamental components of an algorithm, making this a crucial step toward practical quantum computing.
The researchers claim this teleportation technique could lay the foundation for a future “quantum internet,” enabling ultra-secure communication, computation, and sensing networks.
Revolutionizing networked quantum computing
“Previous demonstrations of quantum teleportation have focused on transferring quantum states between physically separated systems,” said Dougal Main from the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford, who led the study.
“In our study, we use quantum teleportation to create interactions between these distant systems. By carefully tailoring these interactions, we can perform logical quantum gates—the fundamental operations of quantum computing—between qubits housed in separate quantum computers.
“This breakthrough enables us to effectively ‘wire together’ distinct quantum processors into a single, fully connected quantum computer.”
Scalability using existing technology
The study also confirmed that the quantum system could be built and expanded using currently available technology.
“Our experiment demonstrates that network-distributed quantum information processing is feasible with current technology,” said Professor David Lucas, a principal investigator of the research team and lead scientist at the UK Quantum Computing and Simulation Hub.
“Scaling up quantum computers remains a formidable technical challenge that will likely require new physics insights as well as intensive engineering effort over the coming years.”
The findings were published in the journal Nature under the title Distributed Quantum Computing Across an Optical Network Link.