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qubits

An artistic illustration shows how microscopic bolometers (depicted on the right) can be used to sense very weak radiation emitted from qubits (depicted on the left).

Tiny Bolometers Could Revolutionize Quantum Computing

qubit illustratioj

Photon-Based Approach Promises Error-Resilient Logical Qubits

Within a dense system some terbium ions form pair states. Because of their unique properties, these pairs are blind to the single terbium ions nearby that would cause them to lose their quantum information. Protected from their messy environment, they can act as qubits with surprisingly long coherence lifetimes.

Solid-state qubits: Forget about being clean, embrace mess

This artistic depiction shows electron fractionalization — in which strongly interacting charges can “fractionalize” into three parts — in the fractional quantum anomalous Hall phase.

Researchers make a quantum computing leap with a magnetic twist

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