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Meet Willow, our state-of-the-art quantum chip
Meet Willow, our state-of-the-art quantum chip
Quantum engineers are essentially working with a "black box" - they can harness quantum mechanical principles to build working computers without fully understanding the deeper nature of what's happening, whether it truly involves parallel universes or some other explanation for the remarkable computational advantages quantum computers achieve.
Pioneered by our team and now widely used as a standard in the field, RCS is the classically hardest benchmark that can be done on a quantum computer today. You can think of this as an entry point for quantum computing — it checks whether a quantum computer is doing something that couldn’t be done on a classical computer. Any team building a quantum computer should check first if it can beat classical computers on RCS; otherwise there is strong reason for skepticism that it can tackle more complex quantum tasks.
Willow’s performance on this benchmark is astonishing: It performed a computation in under five minutes that would take one of today’s fastest supercomputers 1025 or 10 septillion years. If you want to write it out, it’s 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years. This mind-boggling number exceeds known timescales in physics and vastly exceeds the age of the universe. It lends credence to the notion that quantum computation occurs in many parallel universes, in line with the idea that we live in a multiverse, a prediction first made by David Deutsch.
·blog.google·
Meet Willow, our state-of-the-art quantum chip