While it sounds like a gadget from Star Trek, teleportation is real – and it is happening at ҹɫֱ. In in Science, our researchers moved a quantum state from one place to another without physically moving it through space - and they accomplished this feat with fault-tolerance and excellent fidelity. This is an important milestone for the whole quantum computing community and the latest example of ҹɫֱ achieving critical milestones years ahead of expectations.
While it seems exotic, teleportation is a critical piece of technology needed for full scale fault-tolerant quantum computing, and it is used widely in algorithm and architecture design. In addition to being essential on its own, teleportation has historically been used to demonstrate a high level of system maturity. The protocol requires multiple qubits, high-fidelity state-preparation, single-qubit operations, entangling operations, mid-circuit measurement, and conditional operations, making it an excellent system-level benchmark.
Our team was motivated to do this work by the US Government Intelligence Advance Research Projects Activity (IARPA), who set a challenge to perform high fidelity teleportation with the goal of advancing the state of science in universal fault-tolerant quantum computing. IARPA further specified that the entanglement and teleportation protocols must also maintain fault-tolerance, a key property that keeps errors local and correctable.
These ambitious goals required developing highly complex systems, protocols, and other infrastructure to enable exquisite control and operation of quantum-mechanical hardware. We are proud to have accomplished these goals ahead of schedule, demonstrating the flexibility, performance, and power of ҹɫֱ’s Quantum Charge Coupled Device (QCCD) architecture.
ҹɫֱ’s demonstration marks the first time that an arbitrary quantum state has been teleported at the logical level (using a quantum error correcting code). This means that instead of teleporting the quantum state of a single physical qubit we have teleported the quantum information encoded in an entangled set of physical qubits, known as a logical qubit. In other words, the collective state of a bunch of qubits is teleported from one set of physical qubits to another set of physical qubits. This is, in a sense, a lot closer to what you see in Star Trek – they teleport the state of a big collection of atoms at once. Except for the small detail of coming up with a pile of matter with which to reconstruct a human body...
This is also the first demonstration of a fully fault-tolerant version of the state teleportation circuit using real-time quantum error correction (QEC), decoding mid-circuit measurement of syndromes and implementing corrections during the protocol. It is critical for computers to be able to catch and correct any errors that happen along the way, and this is not something other groups have managed to do in any robust sense. In addition, our team achieved the result with high fidelity (97.5%±0.2%), providing a powerful demonstration of the quality of our H2 quantum processor, Powered by Honeywell.
Our team also tried several variations of logical teleportation circuits, using both transversal gates and lattice surgery protocols, thanks to the flexibility of our QCCD architecture. This marks the first demonstration of lattice surgery performed on a QEC code.
Lattice surgery is a strategy for implementing logical gates that requires only 2D nearest-neighbor interactions, making it especially useful for architectures whose qubit locations are fixed, such as superconducting architectures. QCCD and other technologies that do not have fixed qubit positioning might employ this method, another method, or some mixture. We are fortunate that our QCCD architecture allows us to explore the use of different logical gating options so that we can optimize our choices for experimental realities.
While the teleportation demonstration is the big result, sometimes it is the behind-the-scenes technology advancements that make the big differences. The experiments in this paper were designed at the logical level using an internally developed logical-level programming language dubbed Simple Logical Representation (SLR). This is yet another marker of our system’s maturity – we are no longer programming at the physical level but have instead moved up one “layer of abstraction”. Someday, all quantum algorithms will need to be run on the logical level with rounds of quantum error correction. This is a markedly different state than most present experiments, which are run on the physical level without quantum error correction. It is also worth noting that these results were generated using the software stack available to any user of ҹɫֱ’s H-Series quantum computers, and these experiments were run alongside customer jobs – underlining that these results are commercial performance, not hero data on a bespoke system.
Ironically, a key element in this work is our ability to move our qubits through space the “normal” way - this capacity gives us all-to-all connectivity, which was essential for some of the QEC protocols used in the complex task of fault-tolerant logical teleportation. .
ҹɫֱ, the world’s largest integrated quantum company, pioneers powerful quantum computers and advanced software solutions. ҹɫֱ’s technology drives breakthroughs in materials discovery, cybersecurity, and next-gen quantum AI. With over 500 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, ҹɫֱ leads the quantum computing revolution across continents.
The most common question in the public discourse around quantum computers has been, “When will they be useful?” We have an answer.
Very recently in Nature we a successful demonstration of a quantum computer generating certifiable randomness, a critical underpinning of our modern digital infrastructure. We explained how we will be taking a product to market this year, based on that advance – one that could only be achieved because we have the world’s most powerful quantum computer.
Today, we have made another huge leap in a different domain, providing fresh evidence that our quantum computers are the best in the world. In this case, we have shown that our quantum computers can be a useful tool for advancing scientific discovery.
Our latest shows how our quantum computer rivals the best classical approaches in expanding our understanding of magnetism. This provides an entry point that could lead directly to innovations in fields from biochemistry, to defense, to new materials. These are tangible and meaningful advances that will deliver real world impact.
To achieve this, we partnered with researchers from Caltech, Fermioniq, EPFL, and the Technical University of Munich. The team used ҹɫֱ’s System Model H2 to simulate quantum magnetism at a scale and level of accuracy that pushes the boundaries of what we know to be possible.
As the authors of the paper state:
“We believe the quantum data provided by System Model H2 should be regarded as complementary to classical numerical methods, and is arguably the most convincing standard to which they should be compared.”
Our computer simulated the quantum Ising model, a model for quantum magnetism that describes a set of magnets (physicists call them ‘spins’) on a lattice that can point up or down, and prefer to point the same way as their neighbors. The model is inherently “quantum” because the spins can move between up and down configurations by a process known as “quantum tunneling”.
Researchers have struggled to simulate the dynamics of the Ising model at larger scales due to the enormous computational cost of doing so. Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman, who is widely considered to be the progenitor of quantum computing, once said, “.” When attempting to simulate quantum systems at comparable scales on classical computers, the computational demands can quickly become overwhelming. It is the inherent ‘quantumness’ of these problems that makes them so hard classically, and conversely, so well-suited for quantum computing.
These inherently quantum problems also lie at the heart of many complex and useful material properties. The quantum Ising model is an entry point to confront some of the deepest mysteries in the study of interacting quantum magnets. While rooted in fundamental physics, its relevance extends to wide-ranging commercial and defense applications, including medical test equipment, quantum sensors, and the study of exotic states of matter like superconductivity.
Instead of tailored demonstrations that claim ‘quantum advantage’ in contrived scenarios, our breakthroughs announced this week prove that we can tackle complex, meaningful scientific questions difficult for classical methods to address. In the work described in this paper, we have proved that quantum computing could be the gold standard for materials simulations. These developments are critical steps toward realizing the potential of quantum computers.
With only 56 qubits in our commercially available System Model H2, the most powerful quantum system in the world today, we are already testing the limits of classical methods, and in some cases, exceeding them. Later this year, we will introduce our massively more powerful 96-qubit Helios system - breaching the boundaries of what until recently was deemed possible.
The marriage of AI and quantum computing is going to have a widespread and meaningful impact in many aspects of our lives, combining the strengths of both fields to tackle complex problems.
Quantum and AI are the ideal partners. At ҹɫֱ, we are developing tools to accelerate AI with quantum computers, and quantum computers with AI. According to recent independent analysis, our quantum computers are the world’s most powerful, enabling state-of-the-art approaches like Generative Quantum AI (Gen QAI), where we train classical AI models with data generated from a quantum computer.
We harness AI methods to accelerate the development and performance of our full quantum computing stack as opposed to simply theorizing from the sidelines. A paper in Nature Machine Intelligence reveals the results of a recent collaboration between ҹɫֱ and Google DeepMind to tackle the hard problem of quantum compilation.
The work shows a classical AI model supporting quantum computing by demonstrating its potential for quantum circuit optimization. An AI approach like this has the potential to lead to more effective control at the hardware level, to a richer suite of middleware tools for quantum circuit compilation, error mitigation and correction, even to novel high-level quantum software primitives and quantum algorithms.
The joint ҹɫֱ-Google DeepMind team of researchers tackled one of quantum computing’s most pressing challenges: minimizing the number of highly expensive but essential T-gates required for universal quantum computation. This is important specifically for the fault-tolerant regime, which is becoming increasingly relevant as quantum error correction protocols are being explored on rapidly developing quantum hardware. The joint team of researchers adapted AlphaTensor, Google DeepMind’s reinforcement learning AI system for algorithm discovery, which was introduced to improve the efficiency of linear algebra computations. The team introduced AlphaTensor-Quantum, which takes as input a quantum circuit and returns a new, more efficient one in terms of number of T-gates, with exactly the same functionality!
AlphaTensor-Quantum outperformed current state-of-the art optimization methods and matched the best human-designed solutions across multiple circuits in a thoroughly curated set of circuits, chosen for their prevalence in many applications, from quantum arithmetic to quantum chemistry. This breakthrough shows the potential for AI to automate the process of finding the most efficient quantum circuit. This is the first time that such an AI model has been put to the problem of T-count reduction at such a large scale.
The symbiotic relationship between quantum and AI works both ways. When AI and quantum computing work together, quantum computers could dramatically accelerate machine learning algorithms, whether by the development and application of natively quantum algorithms, or by offering quantum-generated training data that can be used to train a classical AI model.
Our recent announcement about Generative Quantum AI (Gen QAI) spells out our commitment to unlocking the value of the data generated by our H2 quantum computer. This value arises from the world’s leading fidelity and computational power of our System Model H2, making it impossible to exactly simulate on any classical computer, and therefore the data it generates – that we can use to train AI – is inaccessible by any other means. ҹɫֱ’s Chief Scientist for Algorithms and Innovation, Prof. Harry Buhrman, has likened accessing the first truly quantum-generated training data to the invention of the modern microscope in the seventeenth century, which revealed an entirely new world of tiny organisms thriving unseen within a single drop of water.
Recently, we announced a wide-ranging partnership with NVIDIA. It charts a course to commercial scale applications arising from the partnership between high-performance classical computers, powerful AI systems, and quantum computers that breach the boundaries of what previously could and could not be done. Our President & CEO, Dr. Raj Hazra spoke to CNBC recently about our partnership. Watch the video here.
As we prepare for the next stage of quantum processor development, with the launch of our Helios system in 2025, we’re excited to see how AI can help write more efficient code for quantum computers – and how our quantum processors, the most powerful in the world, can provide a backend for AI computations.
As in any truly symbiotic relationship, the addition of AI to quantum computing equally benefits both sides of the equation.
To read more about ҹɫֱ and Google DeepMind’s collaboration, please read the scientific paper .
Few things are more important to the smooth functioning of our digital economies than trustworthy security. From finance to healthcare, from government to defense, quantum computers provide a means of building trust in a secure future.
ҹɫֱ and its partners JPMorganChase, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory and the University of Texas used quantum computers to solve a known industry challenge, generating the “random seeds” that are essential for the cryptography behind all types of secure communication. As our partner and collaborator, JPMorganChase explain in this that true randomness is a scarce and valuable commodity.
This year, ҹɫֱ will introduce a new product based on this development that has long been anticipated, but until now thought to be some years away from reality.
It represents a major milestone for quantum computing that will reshape commercial technology and cybersecurity: Solving a critical industry challenge by successfully generating certifiable randomness.
Building on the extraordinary computational capabilities of ҹɫֱ’s H2 System – the highest-performing quantum computer in the world – our team has implemented a groundbreaking approach that is ready-made for industrial adoption. of a proof of concept with JPMorganChase, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Argonne National Laboratory, and the University of Texas alongside ҹɫֱ. It lays out a new quantum path to enhanced security that can provide early benefits for applications in cryptography, fairness, and privacy.
By harnessing the powerful properties of quantum mechanics, we’ve shown how to generate the truly random seeds critical to secure electronic communication, establishing a practical use-case that was unattainable before the fidelity and scalability of the H2 quantum computer made it reliable. So reliable, in fact, that it is now possible to turn this into a commercial product.
ҹɫֱ will integrate quantum-generated certifiable randomness into our commercial portfolio later this year. Alongside Generative Quantum AI and our upcoming Helios system – capable of tackling problems a trillion times more computationally complex than H2 – ҹɫֱ is further cementing its leadership in the rapidly-advancing quantum computing industry.
Cryptographic security, a bedrock of the modern economy, relies on two essential ingredients: standardized algorithms and reliable sources of randomness – the stronger the better. Non-deterministic physical processes, such as those governed by quantum mechanics, are ideal sources of randomness, offering near-total unpredictability and therefore, the highest cryptographic protection. Google, when it originally announced , speculated on the possibility of using the random circuit sampling (RCS) protocol for the commercial production of certifiable random numbers. RCS has been used ever since to demonstrate the performance of quantum computers, including a milestone achievement in June 2024 by ҹɫֱ and JPMorganChase, demonstrating their first quantum computer to defy classical simulation. More recently RCS was used again by Google for the launch of its Willow processor.
In today’s , our joint team used the world’s highest-performing quantum and classical computers to generate certified randomness via RCS. The work was based on advanced research by Shih-Han Hung and Scott Aaronson of the University of Texas at Austin, who are co-authors on today’s paper.
Following a string of major advances in 2024 – solving the scaling challenge, breaking new records for reliability in partnership with Microsoft, and unveiling a hardware roadmap, today proves how quantum technology is capable of creating tangible business value beyond what is available with classical supercomputers alone.
What follows is intended as a non-technical explainer of the results in today’s Nature paper.
For security sensitive applications, classical random number generation is unsuitable because it is not fundamentally random and there is a risk it can be “cracked”. The holy grail is randomness whose source is truly unpredictable, and Nature provides just the solution: quantum mechanics. Randomness is built into the bones of quantum mechanics, where determinism is thrown out the door and outcomes can be true coin flips.
At ҹɫֱ, we have a strong track record in developing methods for generating certifiable randomness using a quantum computer. In 2021, we introduced Quantum Origin to the market, as a quantum-generated source of entropy targeted at hardening classically-generated encryption keys, using well known quantum technologies that prior to that it had not been possible to use.
In their theory paper, , Hung and Aaronson ask the question: is it possible to repurpose RCS, and use it to build an application that moves beyond quantum technologies and takes advantage of the power of a quantum computer running quantum circuits?
This was the inspiration for the collaboration team led by JPMorganChase and ҹɫֱ to draw up plans to execute the proposal using real-world technology. Here’s how it worked:
This confirmed that ҹɫֱ’s quantum computer is not only incapable of being matched by classical computers but can also be used reliably to produce a certifiably random seed from a quantum computer without the need to build your own device, or even trust the device you are accessing.
The use of randomness in critical cybersecurity environments will gravitate towards quantum resources, as the security demands of end users grows in the face of ongoing cyber threats.
The era of quantum utility offers the promise of radical new approaches to solving substantial and hard problems for businesses and governments.
ҹɫֱ’s H2 has now demonstrated practical value for cybersecurity vendors and customers alike, where non-deterministic sources of encryption may in time be overtaken by nature’s own source of randomness.
In 2025, we will launch our Helios device, capable of supporting at least 50 high-fidelity logical qubits – and further extending our lead in the quantum computing sector. We thus continue our track record of disclosing our objectives and then meeting or surpassing them. This commitment is essential, as it generates faith and conviction among our partners and collaborators, that empirical results such as those reported today can lead to successful commercial applications.
Helios, which is already in its late testing phase, ahead of being commercially available later this year, brings higher fidelity, greater scale, and greater reliability. It promises to bring a wider set of hybrid quantum-supercomputing opportunities to our customers – making quantum computing more valuable and more accessible than ever before.
And in 2025 we look forward to adding yet another product, building out our cybersecurity portfolio with a quantum source of certifiably random seeds for a wide range of customers who require this foundational element to protect their businesses and organizations.