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Engineers at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) achieved a milestone in quantum computing by demonstrating Schrödinger's famous thought experiment using an antimony atom.
Scientists used antimony atoms to improve quantum computing by making qubits more stable, like a quantum cat, and ...
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IEEE Spectrum on MSNA Cat’s Nine Lives Inspire a Way to Quell Quantum ErrorsNow, researchers in Australia say they have devised a method of encoding quantum information that makes the accumulation of ...
But a team of scientists say that, by using an antimony atom and the Schrödinger's Cat thought experiment, they could have found a way to stop them. When you purchase through links on our site ...
Get Instant Summarized Text (Gist) Chemists have synthesized methylenedistibiranes, three-membered rings containing two antimony and one carbon atom, using a three-step process. These rings serve ...
The team from Australia has demonstrated that an atom of antimony can be used to store data for use in quantum computations in such a way that it is better protected from errors than in a standard ...
For this research paper, Prof. Morello's team used an atom of antimony, which is much more complex than standard "qubits," or quantum building blocks. "In our work, the 'cat' is an atom of ...
For this research paper, Prof. Morello's team used an atom of antimony, which is much more complex than standard 'qubits', or quantum building blocks. "In our work, the 'cat' is an atom of ...
In a real-world experiment, Andrea Morello, a professor of Quantum Engineering at UNSW, used the atom of the heavy element of antimony as a qubit and the metaphorical Schrödinger’s cat.
For this research paper, Prof. Morello’s team used an atom of antimony, which is much more complex than standard ‘qubits’, or quantum building blocks. “In our work, the ‘cat’ is an ...
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