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Quantum Computing, Communication, and Sensing


- The potentials and commercial applications in the NISQ era for Quantum computing, Quantum communication, and Quantum sensing.
- Quantum computing applications for optimization, machine learning, and chemistry. Quantum communication applications with classical (e.g., PQC) or Quantum approach (e.g., QKD). Quantum sensing applications for medical devices, aerospace, and defense industries.
”Finding appropriate algorithms and problems is really challenging for Quantum Computers now,“ said Rupak Biswas, Ph.D., Director of NASA Exploration Technology, who mentioned this during one of the keynote speeches.
On Monday, at 10:00 AM (EST time zone) on April 12, 2021, Quantum.Tech (Alpha Events, 2021) started an internationally accessible virtual event discussing the exciting potential commercial applications of Quantum computing, Quantum communication, and Quantum sensing. The no-chargeable event is sponsored by big players in the industry such as IBM, AWS, Honeywell, and D ....

South Korea , South Korean , Ivan Ostojic , Carl Williams , Sinergi Wahana Gemilang , Cerca Cqc Dwave , Idquantique Ionq Mckinsey Menten , Bob Sutor , Hans Melo , Rupak Biswas , Quantum Networks , Amazon Web Services , Exploration Technology , National Institute Of Standards , Defense Industries , Oak Ridge National Lab , Quantum Computers , Commercial Applications , Sinergi Wahana , Quantum Tech , Alpha Events , Zapata Computing , Jennifer Houston , Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum , Fault Tolerant Quantum Computer , Quantum Machine Learning ,

Qubits Comprised Of Holes Could Be The Trick To Build Faster, Larger Quantum Computers


Qubits Comprised Of Holes Could Be The Trick To Build Faster, Larger Quantum Computers
A new study indicates holes the solution to operational speed/coherence trade-off, potential scaling up of qubits to a mini-quantum computer.
Quantum computers are predicted to be much more powerful and functional than today’s ‘classical’ computers.
One way to make a quantum bit is to use the ‘spin’ of an electron, which can point either up or down. To make quantum computers as fast and power-efficient as possible we would like to operate them using only electric fields, which are applied using ordinary electrodes.
Although spin does not ordinarily ‘talk’ to electric fields, in some materials spins can interact with electric fields indirectly, and these are some of the hottest materials currently studied in quantum computing. ....

United Kingdom , Dimi Culcer , Sven Rogge , Joe Salfi , Energy Electronic Technologies , Centre Of Excellence , University Of British Columbia , University Of British Columbia Vancouver , Communication Technology , Australian Research Council Centre Of Excellence , Centre For Quantum Computing , Prof Dimi Culcer , Prof Sven Rogge , Quantum Computing , Prof Joe Salfi , Quantum Information , Australian Research Council Centre , Future Low Energy Electronic Technologies , Quantum Computation , British Columbia , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஸ்வெந் முரட்டுத்தனம் , ஓஹோ சல்பி , ஆற்றல் மின்னணு தொழில்நுட்பங்கள் , மையம் ஆஃப் சிறப்பானது , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் பிரிட்டிஷ் கொலம்பியா ,