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    Home»Technology»A New State of Matter Just Changed the Future of Quantum Computing
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    A New State of Matter Just Changed the Future of Quantum Computing

    By Sonia Fernandez, University of California - Santa BarbaraFebruary 23, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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    Majorana 1 Topological Quantum Processor
    Majorana 1, the eight-qubit topological quantum processor unveiled at Microsoft Station Q’s 2025 conference. Credit: Microsoft

    Microsoft and UC Santa Barbara researchers have unveiled an eight-qubit topological quantum processor, marking a major step toward building a fully functional topological quantum computer.

    Their innovation lies in a new state of matter, a topological superconductor, which could enable faster, more stable quantum computing.

    A New Era in Quantum Computing

    Microsoft, in collaboration with UC Santa Barbara physicists, has unveiled an eight-qubit topological quantum processor — the first of its kind. This breakthrough chip serves as a proof-of-concept, paving the way for the long-anticipated development of a topological quantum computer.

    “We’ve got a bunch of stuff that we’ve been keeping under wraps that we’re dropping all at once now,” said Microsoft Station Q Director Chetan Nayak, a professor of physics at UCSB and a Technical Fellow for Quantum Hardware at Microsoft. The chip was introduced at Station Q’s annual conference in Santa Barbara and is detailed in a newly published paper in Nature. The research, conducted by Microsoft and its academic collaborators, presents key measurements of these novel qubits.

    The Power of a New State of Matter

    “We have created a new state of matter, called a topological superconductor,” Nayak explained. This phase of matter hosts exotic boundaries called Majorana zero modes (MZMs) that are useful for quantum computing, he explained. Results of rigorous simulation and testing of their heterostructure devices are consistent with the observation of such states. “It shows that we can do it, do it fast and do it accurately,” he said.

    The researchers also followed up their Nature result with a paper currently in preprint outlining a roadmap for scaling up their technology into a fully functional topological quantum computer.

    Majorana Magic: The Key to Stability

    The promise of quantum computing lies in the speed and power of its computations, expected to outperform even the most advanced classical supercomputer. All of this rests on the qubit, the quantum computing version of the bit, the fundamental unit of information for classical computers. While classical bits exist only in a state of either zero or one, qubits can represent zero, one, and combinations in between.

    Qubits can come in different forms, utilizing the quantum behaviors of trapped ions, for instance, or photons. Topological systems are based on a different type of particle called an anyon, a type of “quasiparticle” that emerges as the result of the correlated states of many interacting particles at the surface of a material, in this case a superconducting nanowire.

    What makes topological quantum computing such a hot field of research is that it promises more stability and robustness to error than other quantum computing systems. Qubits can be prone to error, requiring quantum computer builders to account for it by, for instance, building more qubits to error-correct.

    Building Error Resistance at the Hardware Level

    “A complementary approach is to build in the error correction at the hardware level,” Nayak said. Because quantum information is distributed and stored over a physical system rather than in individual particles or atoms, he explained, the information being handled by the topological qubits is less likely to lose its coherence, resulting in a more fault-tolerant system.

    But not just any quasiparticle will do. For topological quantum computing, Majorana particles — more specifically Majorana zero modes — are the tool of choice. Named for Italian physicist Ettore Majorana, who predicted them in 1937, these particles are special in that they are their own antiparticles, and are able to retain a “memory” of their relative positions over time. By “braiding” them — moving them physically around each other — it is possible to create a more robust quantum logic.

    The researchers realized these MZMs through the placement of an indium arsenide semiconductor nanowire very close to an aluminum superconductor. Under the right conditions, the semiconducting wire becomes superconducting and enters a topological phase. MZMs emerge at the ends of the wire, while the rest of the wire has an energy gap. “The larger this topological gap,” Nayak pointed out, “the more robust the topological phase is.

    “The surprising thing is, when you make the gap larger, not only does it become more robust, but you potentially go faster and maybe shrink everything a little bit so you’re not paying for your fidelity with size.”

    A Small but Mighty Step Forward

    At eight qubits, the researchers’ topological processor is a mere embryo in the world of quantum computers, but marks a major milestone in the scientists’ decades-long quest to develop a topological quantum computer. Along the way, Nayak said, there have been fruitful partnerships between Station Q and the university, especially in the realm of creating the materials that host topological quantum behaviors.

    “Chris Palmstrøm has been a collaborator at times, and he has made important advances in these kinds of materials,” he said of the electronic materials expert, while materials scientist Susanne Stemmer contributed her expertise with fabrication processes. Station Q has also hired many students to its team, and importantly, Nayak added, the semiconductor heterostructure concept is born from the Nobel Prize-winning ideas of the late Herb Kroemer, who was a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

    “There’s a long history of expertise and talent at UCSB in these kinds of material combinations, and on this really cutting-edge materials science that opens up new types of physics we can do.”

    Reference: “Interferometric single-shot parity measurement in InAs–Al hybrid devices” by Microsoft Azure Quantum, Morteza Aghaee, Alejandro Alcaraz Ramirez, Zulfi Alam, Rizwan Ali, Mariusz Andrzejczuk, Andrey Antipov, Mikhail Astafev, Amin Barzegar, Bela Bauer, Jonathan Becker, Umesh Kumar Bhaskar, Alex Bocharov, Srini Boddapati, David Bohn, Jouri Bommer, Leo Bourdet, Arnaud Bousquet, Samuel Boutin, Lucas Casparis, Benjamin J. Chapman, Sohail Chatoor, Anna Wulff Christensen, Cassandra Chua, Patrick Codd, William Cole, Paul Cooper, Fabiano Corsetti, Ajuan Cui, Paolo Dalpasso, Juan Pablo Dehollain, Gijs de Lange, Michiel de Moor, Andreas Ekefjärd, Tareq El Dandachi, Juan Carlos Estrada Saldaña, Saeed Fallahi, Luca Galletti, Geoff Gardner, Deshan Govender, Flavio Griggio, Ruben Grigoryan, Sebastian Grijalva, Sergei Gronin, Jan Gukelberger, Marzie Hamdast, Firas Hamze, Esben Bork Hansen, Sebastian Heedt, Zahra Heidarnia, Jesús Herranz Zamorano, Samantha Ho, Laurens Holgaard, John Hornibrook, Jinnapat Indrapiromkul, Henrik Ingerslev, Lovro Ivancevic, Thomas Jensen, Jaspreet Jhoja, Jeffrey Jones, Konstantin V. Kalashnikov, Ray Kallaher, Rachpon Kalra, Farhad Karimi, Torsten Karzig, Evelyn King, Maren Elisabeth Kloster, Christina Knapp, Dariusz Kocon, Jonne V. Koski, Pasi Kostamo, Mahesh Kumar, Tom Laeven, Thorvald Larsen, Jason Lee, Kyunghoon Lee, Grant Leum, Kongyi Li, Tyler Lindemann, Matthew Looij, Julie Love, Marijn Lucas, Roman Lutchyn, Morten Hannibal Madsen, Nash Madulid, Albert Malmros, Michael Manfra, Devashish Mantri, Signe Brynold Markussen, Esteban Martinez, Marco Mattila, Robert McNeil, Antonio B. Mei, Ryan V. Mishmash, Gopakumar Mohandas, Christian Mollgaard, Trevor Morgan, George Moussa, Chetan Nayak, Jens Hedegaard Nielsen, Jens Munk Nielsen, William Hvidtfelt Padkar Nielsen, Bas Nijholt, Mike Nystrom, Eoin O’Farrell, Thomas Ohki, Keita Otani, Brian Paquelet Wütz, Sebastian Pauka, Karl Petersson, Luca Petit, Dima Pikulin, Guen Prawiroatmodjo, Frank Preiss, Eduardo Puchol Morejon, Mohana Rajpalke, Craig Ranta, Katrine Rasmussen, David Razmadze, Outi Reentila, David J. Reilly, Yuan Ren, Ken Reneris, Richard Rouse, Ivan Sadovskyy, Lauri Sainiemi, Irene Sanlorenzo, Emma Schmidgall, Cristina Sfiligoj, Mustafeez Bashir Shah, Kevin Simoes, Shilpi Singh, Sarat Sinha, Thomas Soerensen, Patrick Sohr, Tomas Stankevic, Lieuwe Stek, Eric Stuppard, Henri Suominen, Judith Suter, Sam Teicher, Nivetha Thiyagarajah, Raj Tholapi, Mason Thomas, Emily Toomey, Josh Tracy, Michelle Turley, Shivendra Upadhyay, Ivan Urban, Kevin Van Hoogdalem, David J. Van Woerkom, Dmitrii V. Viazmitinov, Dominik Vogel, John Watson, Alex Webster, Joseph Weston, Georg W. Winkler, Di Xu, Chung Kai Yang, Emrah Yucelen, Roland Zeisel, Guoji Zheng and Justin Zilke, 19 February 2025, Nature.
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08445-2

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