Microsoft has introduced the new quantum computing chip, Majurana 1, claiming that it greatly brings technology to practical use.
The company said that the slide, designed to reduce the error rates in the quantum accounts, puts quantum computing as a penetration in the short term rather than a distant probability.
Quantum computing has the ability to revolutionize fields such as medicine and chemistry by solving complex problems that exceed the capabilities of classic computers. However, technology also poses risks to current cyber security systems, as it can break the traditional encryption methods.
There was a major challenge to quantum computing is Qubits control, basic processing units, which are offered errors. Microsoft said its slice, which is based on a rare atomic particle called Majoraana Fermion, has a lower error rate than competitors.
The majoraana 1 chip has been developed nearly two decades ago and was manufactured in Microsoft Labs in Washington and Denmark. It was built with Indium Arsenide and Aluminium, with high -ended nanopolitan wires that allows them to monitor the long -fly majoraana particles.
Microsoft executives said that the slide can be controlled through standard computing equipment, and to distinguish them from Google and IBM.
Microsoft did not offer a schedule for increasing the quantum segment, but stated that practical quantum computing is now “years, not contracts”. The company’s demand comes amid a discussion in the industry about when the quantum computers will exceed the current artificial intelligence chips.
Nvidia Jensen Huang CEO recently expected that the shift is still two decades away, while Google said that commercial quantum requests could reach within five years. IBM has exhibited quantum computing on a large scale by 2033.
The CEO of Microsoft Jason Zander Majoraana 1 described as a “high -risk and high reward” strategy and said the biggest challenge is the solution to basic physics. “There is no textbook for this, and we had to create it,” he said.