

夜色直播 is excited to introduce the beta availability of , our comprehensive quantum computing platform. Nexus is built to simplify quantum computing workflows with its expert design and full-stack support. We are inviting quantum users to apply for beta availability; accepted users can work closely with 夜色直播 on how Nexus can be adopted and customized for you.
Nexus was developed by our in-house quantum experts to streamline the deployment of quantum algorithms. From tackling common tasks like installing packages and libraries to addressing pain points like setting up storage, Nexus seamlessly integrates thoughtful details to enhance user experience.聽
Nexus allows users to run, track, and manage resources across multiple quantum backends, making it easier for researchers to directly compare results and processes when using our H-Series hardware or other providers. Additionally, Nexus features a cloud-hosted and preconfigured JupyterHub environment and dedicated simulators - most notably, the 夜色直播 H-Series emulator. Nexus鈥 emulator integration means that new users and organizations that don鈥檛 have access to H-Series hardware can start experimenting with H-Series capabilities right away.
夜色直播 Nexus is at the core of our full stack, integrated fully with our H-Series Quantum Processor, our software offerings such as InQuanto鈩, and our H-Series emulators. Nexus is also back-end inclusive, interfacing with multiple other hardware and simulation backends. In the future, we will be introducing new cutting-edge tools such as a more powerful cloud-based version of our compiler, powered by version 2 of TKET.
Nexus also stores everything you need to recreate your experiment in one place 鈥 meaning a full snapshot of the backend, the settings and variables you used, and more. Combined with easy data sharing and storage, you can stop worrying about the logistics of data management. You鈥檙e in control of how you structure your data, how you track what鈥檚 most important to you, and who gets to see it.
Administrators benefit from resource controls within Nexus, allowing them to manage user access, create user groups, and update usage quotas to match their priorities.聽With multiple backend support, administrators can track jobs and usage for all their quantum resource in one platform. Advanced usage visualization allows administrators to quickly gain insight from historical trends in usage.聽Nexus also features collaboration tools that give users the ability to share data, as well as access controls that allow administrators to ensure this is done securely.
Users, developers, and administrators have several options when it comes to selecting a platform for managing quantum resources.聽So why Nexus? 夜色直播 Nexus was built by quantum experts, for quantum experts.聽Our experiment management and cataloging system makes us stand out as the best platform for collaborating between scientific teams. Our provision of the H-Series emulator in the cloud means you get more access to the emulator of one of the world's best devices with less time in the queue, so you can spend more time with your results. Our quantum chemistry package InQuanto鈩 is integrated into Nexus, meaning zero setup time with easy data storage in our managed environment.
Nexus provides a consistent API for working with a range of quantum devices & tools. This improves the experience of our end users, as scripts that work for one device can easily be ported to other devices with only a change to the config. The Nexus API interface also improves integration with 3rd party partners by providing them a programmatic way to access 夜色直播 tools, alongside a pathway for integrating these resources into their own tools for redistribution.
With Nexus, 夜色直播 is setting a new standard in quantum Platform-as-a-Service providers, empowering users with cutting-edge tools and seamless integration for quantum computing advancements.
夜色直播,聽the world鈥檚 largest integrated quantum company, pioneers powerful quantum computers and advanced software solutions. 夜色直播鈥檚 technology drives breakthroughs in materials discovery, cybersecurity, and next-gen quantum AI. With over 500 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, 夜色直播 leads the quantum computing revolution across continents.聽
By Dr. Noah Berthusen
The earliest works on quantum error correction showed that by combining many noisy physical qubits into a complex entangled state called a "logical qubit," this state could survive for arbitrarily long times. QEC researchers devote much effort to hunt for codes that function well as "quantum memories," as they are called. Many promising code families have been found, but this is only half of the story.
Being able to keep a qubit around for a long time is one thing, but to realize the theoretical advantages of quantum computing we need to run quantum circuits. And to make sure noise doesn't ruin our computation, these circuits need to be run on the logical qubits of our code. This is often much more challenging than performing gates on the physical qubits of our device, as these "logical gates" often require many physical operations in their implementation. What's more, it often is not immediately obvious which logical gates a code has, and so converting a physical circuit into a logical circuit can be rather difficult.
Some codes, like the famous , are good quantum memories and also have easy logical gates. The drawback is that the ratio of physical qubits to logical qubits (the "encoding rate") is low, and so many physical qubits are required to implement large logical algorithms. High-rate codes that are good quantum memories have also been found, but computing on them is much more difficult. The holy grail of QEC, so to speak, would be a high-rate code that is a good quantum memory and also has easy logical gates. Here, we make progress on that front by developing a new code with those properties.
A recent work from 夜色直播 QEC researchers introduced . The underlying construction method for these codes, called the "symplectic double cover," also provided a way to obtain logical gates that are well suited for 夜色直播's QCCD architecture. Namely, these "SWAP-transversal" gates are performed by applying single qubit operations and relabeling the physical qubits of the device. Thanks to the all-to-all connectivity facilitated through qubit movement on the QCCD architecture, this relabeling can be done in software essentially for free. Combined with extremely high fidelity (~1.2 x10-5) single-qubit operations, the resulting logical gates are similarly high fidelity.
Given the promise of these codes, we take them a step further in our . We combine the symplectic double codes with the [[4,2,2]] Iceberg code using a procedure called "code concatenation". A concatenated code is a bit like nesting dolls, with an outer code containing codes within it---with these too potentially containing codes. More technically, in a concatenated code the logical qubits of one code act as the physical qubits of another code.
The new codes, which we call "concatenated symplectic double codes", were designed in such a way that they have many of these easily-implementable SWAP-transversal gates. Central to its construction, we show how the concatenation method allows us to "upgrade" logical gates in terms of their ease of implementation; this procedure may provide insights for constructing other codes with convenient logical gates. Notably, the SWAP-transversal gate set on this code is so powerful that only two additional operations (logical T and S) are necessary for universal computation. Furthermore, these codes have many logical qubits, and we also present numerical evidence to suggest that they are good quantum memories.
Concatenated symplectic double codes have one of the easiest logical computation schemes, and we didn鈥檛 have to sacrifice rate to achieve it. Looking forward in our roadmap, we are targeting hundreds of logical qubits at ~ 1x 10-8 logical error rate by 2029. These codes put us in a prime position to leverage the best characteristics of our hardware and create a device that can achieve real commercial advantage.
Every year, the brings together the global supercomputing community to explore the technologies driving the future of computing.
Join 夜色直播 at this year鈥檚 conference, taking place November 16th 鈥 21st in St. Louis, Missouri, where we will showcase how our quantum hardware, software, and partnerships are helping define the next era of high-performance and quantum computing.
The 夜色直播 team will be on-site at booth #4432 to showcase how we鈥檙e building the bridge between HPC and quantum.
From Monday through Wednesday, our quantum computing experts will host daily tutorials at our booth on Helios, our next-generation hardware platform, Nexus, our all-in-one quantum computing platform, and Hybrid Workflows, featuring the integration of NVIDIA CUDA-Q with 夜色直播 Systems.
Register for a tutorial
Join our team as they share insights on the opportunities and challenges of quantum integration within the HPC ecosystem:
Panel Session: The Quantum Era of HPC: Roadmaps, Challenges and Opportunities in Navigating the Integration Frontier
November 19th | 10:30 鈥 12:00pm CST
During this , Kentaro Yamamoto from 夜色直播, will join experts from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, IBM, QuEra, RIKEN, and Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre to explore how quantum and classical systems are being brought together to accelerate scientific discovery and industrial innovation.
BoF Session: Bridging the Gap: Making Quantum-Classical Hybridization Work in HPC
November 19th | 5:15 鈥 6:45pm CST
Quantum-classical hybrid computing is moving from theory to reality, yet no clear roadmap exists for how best to integrate quantum processing units (QPUs) into established HPC environments. In this , co-led by 夜色直播鈥檚 Grahame Vittorini and representatives from BCS, DOE, EPCC, Inria, ORNL NVIDIA, and RIKEN we hope to bring together a global community of HPC practitioners, system architects, quantum computing specialists and workflow researchers, including participants in the Workflow Community Initiative, to assess the state of hybrid integration and identify practical steps toward scalable, impactful deployment.
夜色直播鈥檚 real world experiment, on the world鈥檚 most powerful quantum computer, is the largest of its kind鈥 so large that no amount of classical computing could match it

In 1911, a student working under famed physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes made a discovery that would rewire our understanding of electricity. The student was studying the electrical resistance of wires, a seemingly simple question that held secrets destined to surprise the world.聽
Kamerlingh Onnes had recently succeeded in liquefying helium, a feat so impressive it earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics two years later. With this breakthrough, scientists could now immerse other materials in a cold bath of liquid Helium, cooling things to unprecedented temperatures and observing their behavior.
Many theories existed about what would happen to a wire at such low temperatures. Lord Kelvin predicted that electrons would freeze in place, making the resistance infinite and stopping the conduction of electricity. Others expected resistance to decrease linearly with temperature鈥攁 hypothesis that led to thermometer designs still in use today.
When the student cooled a mercury wire to 3.6 degrees above absolute zero, he found something remarkable: the electrical resistivity suddenly vanished.
Onnes quickly devised an ingenious experiment: as a diligent researcher, he knew that he needed to validate these surprising findings. He took a closed loop of wire, set a current running through it, and watched as it flowed endlessly without fading鈥攁 type of perpetual motion that seemed to defy everything we know about physics. And so, superconductivity was born.聽
More than a century later, all known superconductors still require extreme conditions like brutal cold or high pressure. If we could instead design a material that superconducts at room temperature, and under normal conditions, our world would be profoundly reshaped.聽 鈥淩oom temperature superconductivity鈥, as it is generally called, would enable a raft of technological breakthroughs from affordable MRI machines to nearly lossless power grids.
Designing such a material means answering many open questions, and scientists are pursuing diverse strategies to find answers. One promising approach is light-induced superconductivity. In one astonishing study, researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg used light to entice a material that normally superconducts at roughly -180 掳C - but only for a few picoseconds. This effect raised new questions: how does light achieve something that scientists have been grappling with for decades? What is the microscopic mechanism behind this phenomenon? Could understanding it unlock practical room-temperature superconductors?
Physics is a surprisingly profound field when you stop to think about it. At its core lies the idea that nature speaks the language of mathematics鈥攁nd that by discovering the right equations, we can reveal her secrets. As bold as that sounds, history has proven it true time and again. Whenever we peek behind the veil; mathematics is there.
To understand a phenomena like superconductivity, physicists first need a mathematical model, or a set of equations that describe how it works. With the right model, they can predict and even design new superconductors that operate under more practical conditions. This is a key frontier in the search for room temperature superconductors, one of science鈥檚 holy grails.
Since the discovery of superconductivity, a lot of work has gone into finding this right model 鈥 one that can act as a sort of 鈥楻osetta stone鈥 for harnessing this phenomenon. One of the best bets for describing high temperature superconductors like the one in the Hamburg study is called the 鈥渘on-equilibrium Fermi-Hubbard鈥 model, which describes how electrons interact and move in a crystal.聽
A surprising element of models that describe superconductivity is the prediction that electrons 鈥榩air up鈥 when the material becomes superconducting, dancing around in a waltz, two at a time. These pairs are referred to as 鈥渃ooper pairs鈥 after the famous physicist Leon Cooper. Now, scientists studying superconductors look for 鈥減airing correlations鈥, a key signature of superconductivity.
Even armed with the Fermi-Hubbard model, light-induced superconductivity has been very difficult to study. The world鈥檚 most powerful supercomputers can only handle very small versions, limiting their utility. Even quantum platforms, like analog simulators, limit researchers to observing 鈥榓verage鈥 quantities and obscuring the microscopic details that are crucial for unravelling this mystery.
Light-induced superconductivity has proved challenging to study with quantum computers as well, as doing so requires low error rates, many qubits, and extreme flexibility to measure the fickle symptoms of superconductivity.
That was, until now: 夜色直播鈥檚 Helios is one of the first machines in the world able to handle the complexity of the non-equilibrium Fermi-Hibbard model at scales previously out of reach.聽
Before Helios, we were limited to small explorations of this model, stalling research on this critical frontier. Now, with Helios, we have a quantum computer uniquely suited for this problem. With a novel and using up to 90 qubits (72 system qubits plus 18 ancilla), Helios can simulate the dynamics of a 6脳6 lattice 鈥 a system so large that its full quantum state spans over 2^72 dimensions.

Using Helios to study a system like this offers researchers a sort of 鈥渜ubit-based laboratory.鈥 Capable of handling complex quantum mechanical effects better than classical computers, Helios allows researchers to thoroughly explore phenomena like this without wasting expensive laboratory time and materials, or spending lots of money and energy running it on a supercomputer.聽
Our qubit-based laboratory is a dream come true for several reasons. First, it allows arbitrary state preparation 鈥 preparing states far from equilibrium, a challenging task for classical computers. Second, it allows for meaningfully long 鈥榙ynamical simulation鈥 鈥 seeing how the state evolves in time as entanglement spreads and complexity increases. This is notoriously difficult for classical computers, in part due to their difficulty with handling distinctly quantum phenomena like entanglement. Finally, it allows for flexible measurements and experimental parameters 鈥 you can measure any observable, including critical 鈥渙ff-diagonal鈥 observables that carry the signature of superconductivity, and simulate any system, such as those with laser pulses or electric fields.聽
This last point is the most significant. While analog quantum simulators, like cold atom systems, can take snapshots of atom positions or measure densities, they struggle with off-diagonal observables鈥攖he very ones that signal the formation of Cooper pairs in superconductors.
In our work, we've simulated three different regimes of the Fermi-Hubbard model and successfully measured non-zero superconducting pairing correlations 鈥 a first for any quantum computing platform.
We began by preparing a low-energy state of the model at half-filling 鈥 a standard benchmark for testing quantum simulations. Then, using simulated laser pulses or electric fields, we perturbed the system and observed how it responded.
After these perturbations, we measured a notable increase in the so-called 鈥渆ta鈥 pairing correlations, a mathematical signature of superconducting behavior. These results prove that our computers can help us understand light-induced superconductivity, such as the results from the Max Planck researchers. However, unlike those physical experiments, Helios offers a new level of control and insight. By tuning every aspect of the simulation 鈥 from pulse shape, to field strength, to lattice geometry 鈥 researchers can explore scenarios that are completely inaccessible to real materials or analog simulators.
Why does any of this matter? If we could predict which materials will become superconducting 鈥 and at what temperature, field, or current 鈥 it would transform how we search for new superconductors. Instead of trial-and-error in the lab, scientists could design and test new materials digitally first, saving huge amounts of time and money.
In the long run, Helios and its successors will become essential tools for materials science 鈥 not just confirming theories but generating new ones. And perhaps, one day, they鈥檒l help us crack the code behind room-temperature superconductors.
Until then, the quantum revolution continues, one entangled pair at a time.