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夜色直播 and CU Boulder just made quantum error correction easier

July 1, 2024

For a quantum computer to be useful, it must be universal, have lots of qubits, and be able to detect and correct errors. The error correction step must be done so well that in the final calculations, you only see an error in less than one in a billion (or maybe even one in a trillion) tries. Correcting errors on a quantum computer is quite tricky, and most current error correcting schemes are quite expensive for quantum computers to run.

We鈥檝e teamed up with researchers at the University of Colorado to 鈥 bringing the era of quantum 鈥榝ault tolerance鈥 closer to reality. Current approaches to error correction involve encoding the quantum information of one qubit into several entangled qubits (called a 鈥渓ogical鈥 qubit). Most of the encoding schemes (called a 鈥渃ode鈥) in use today are relatively inefficient 鈥 they can only make one logical qubit out of a set of physical qubits. As we mentioned earlier, we want lots of error corrected qubits in our machines, so this is highly suboptimal 鈥 a 鈥渓ow encoding rate鈥 means that you need many, many more physical qubits to realize a machine with lots of error corrected logical qubits.

Ideally, our computers will have 鈥渉igh-rate鈥 codes (meaning that you get more logical qubits per physical qubit), and researchers have identified promising schemes known as 鈥渘on-local qLDPC codes鈥. This type of code has been discussed theoretically for years, but until now had never been realized in practice. In a , the joint team has implemented a high rate non-local qLDPC code on our H2 quantum processor, with impressive results.聽

The team used the code to create 4 error protected (logical) qubits, then entangled them in a 鈥淕HZ state鈥 with better fidelity than doing the same operation on physical qubits 鈥 meaning that the error protection code improved fidelity in a difficult entangling operation. The team chose to encode a GHZ state because it is widely used as a system-level benchmark, and its better-than-physical logical preparation marks a highly mature system.

It is worth noting that this remarkable accomplishment was achieved with a very small team, half of whom do not have specialized knowledge about the underlying physics of our processors. Our hardware and software stack are now so mature that advances can be achieved by 鈥渜uantum programmers鈥 who don鈥檛 need advanced quantum hardware knowledge, and who can run their programs on a commercial machine between commercial jobs. This places us bounds ahead of the competition in terms of accessibility and reliability.

This paper marks the first time anyone has entangled 4 logical qubits with better fidelity than the physical analog. This work is in strong synergy with our recent announcement in partnership with Microsoft, where we demonstrated logical fidelities better than physical fidelities on entangled bell pairs and demonstrated multiple rounds of error correction.聽These results with two different codes underscore how we are moving into the era of fault-tolerance ahead of the competition.

The code used in this paper is significantly more optimized for architectures capable of moving the qubits around, like ours. In practice, this means that we are capable of 鈥渘on-local鈥 gates and reconfigurability. A big advantage in particular is that some of the critical operations amount to a simple relabeling of the individual qubits, which is virtually error-free.

The biggest advantage, however, is in this code鈥檚 very high encoding rate. Unlike many codes in use today, this code offers a very high rate of logical qubits per physical qubit 鈥 in fact, the number of logical qubits is proportional to the number of physical qubits, which will allow our machines to scale much more quickly than more traditional codes that have a hard limit on the number of logical qubits one can get in each code block. This is yet another proof point that our machines will scale effectively and quickly.

About 夜色直播

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

Blog
October 23, 2025
Mapping the Hunt for Quantum Advantage

By Konstantinos Meichanetzidis

When will quantum computers outperform classical ones?

This question has hovered over the field for decades, shaping billion-dollar investments and driving scientific debate.

The question has more meaning in context, as the answer depends on the problem at hand. We already have estimates of the quantum computing resources needed for Shor鈥檚 algorithm, which has a superpolynomial advantage for integer factoring over the best-known classical methods, threatening cryptographic protocols. Quantum simulation allows one to glean insights into exotic materials and chemical processes that classical machines struggle to capture, especially when strong correlations are present. But even within these examples, estimates change surprisingly often, carving years off expected timelines. And outside these famous cases, the map to quantum advantage is surprisingly hazy.

Researchers at 夜色直播 have taken a fresh step toward drawing this map. In a new theoretical framework, Harry Buhrman, Niklas Galke, and Konstantinos Meichanetzidis introduce the concept of 鈥渜ueasy instances鈥 (quantum easy) 鈥 problem instances that are comparatively easy for quantum computers but appear difficult for classical ones.

From Problem Classes to Problem Instances

Traditionally, computer scientists classify problems according to their worst-case difficulty. Consider the problem of Boolean satisfiability, or SAT, where one is given a set of variables (each can be assigned a 0 or a 1) and a set of constraints and must decide whether there exists a variable assignment that satisfies all the constraints. SAT is a canonical NP-complete problem, and so in the worst case, both classical and quantum algorithms are expected to perform badly, which means that the runtime scales exponentially with the number of variables. On the other hand, factoring is believed to be easier for quantum computers than for classical ones. But real-world computing doesn鈥檛 deal only in worst cases. Some instances of SAT are trivial; others are nightmares. The same is true for optimization problems in finance, chemistry, or logistics. What if quantum computers have an advantage not across all instances, but only for specific 鈥減ockets鈥 of hard instances? This could be very valuable, but worst-case analysis is oblivious to this and declares that there is no quantum advantage.

To make that idea precise, the researchers turned to a tool from theoretical computer science: Kolmogorov complexity. This is a way of measuring how 鈥渞egular鈥 a string of bits is, based on the length of the shortest program that generates it. A simple string like 0000000000 can be described by a tiny program (鈥減rint ten zeros鈥), while the description of a program that generates a random string exhibiting no pattern is as long as the string itself. From there, the notion of instance complexity was developed: instead of asking 鈥渉ow hard is it to describe this string?鈥, we ask 鈥渉ow hard is it to solve this particular problem instance (represented by a string)?鈥 For a given SAT formula, for example, its polynomial-time instance complexity is the size of the smallest program that runs in polynomial time and decides whether the formula is satisfiable. This smallest program must be consistently answering all other instances, and it is also allowed to declare 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know鈥.

In their new work, the team extends this idea into the quantum realm by defining polynomial-time quantum instance complexity as the size of the shortest quantum program that solves a given instance and runs on polynomial time. This makes it possible to directly compare quantum and classical effort, in terms of program description length, on the very same problem instance. If the quantum description is significantly shorter than the classical one, that problem instance is one the researchers call 鈥渜耻别补蝉测鈥: quantum-easy and classically hard. These queasy instances are the precise places where quantum computers offer a provable advantage 鈥 and one that may be overlooked under a worst-case analysis.

Why 鈥淨ueasy鈥?

The playful name captures the imbalance between classical and quantum effort. A queasy instance is one that makes classical algorithms struggle, i.e. their shortest descriptions of efficient programs that decide them are long and unwieldy, while a quantum computer can handle the same instance with a much simpler, faster, and shorter program. In other words, these instances make classical computers 鈥渜ueasy,鈥 while quantum ones solve them efficiently and finding them quantum-easy. The key point of these definitions lies in demonstrating that they yield reasonable results for well-known optimisation problems.

By carefully analysing a mapping from the problem of integer factoring to SAT (which is possible because factoring is inside NP and SAT is NP-complete) the researchers prove that there exist infinitely many queasy SAT instances. SAT is one of the most central and well-studied problems in computer science that finds numerous applications in the real-world. The significant realisation that this theoretical framework highlights is that SAT is not expected to yield a blanket quantum advantage, but within it lie islands of queasiness 鈥 special cases where quantum algorithms decisively win.

Algorithmic Utility

Finding a queasy instance is exciting in itself, but there is more to this story. Surprisingly, within the new framework it is demonstrated that when a quantum algorithm solves a queasy instance, it does much more than solve that single case. Because the program that solves it is so compact, the same program can provably solve an exponentially large set of other instances, as well. Interestingly, the size of this set depends exponentially on the queasiness of the instance!

Think of it like discovering a special shortcut through a maze. Once you鈥檝e found the trick, it doesn鈥檛 just solve that one path, but reveals a pattern that helps you solve many other similarly built mazes, too (even if not optimally). This property is called algorithmic utility, and it means that queasy instances are not isolated curiosities. Each one can open a doorway to a whole corridor with other doors, behind which quantum advantage might lie.

A North Star for the Field

Queasy instances are more than a mathematical curiosity; this is a new framework that provides a language for quantum advantage. Even though the quantities defined in the paper are theoretical, involving Turing machines and viewing programs as abstract bitstrings, they can be approximated in practice by taking an experimental and engineering approach. This work serves as a foundation for pursuing quantum advantage by targeting problem instances and proving that in principle this can be a fruitful endeavour.

The researchers see a parallel with the rise of machine learning. The idea of neural networks existed for decades along with small scale analogue and digital implementations, but only when GPUs enabled large-scale trial and error did they explode into practical use. Quantum computing, they suggest, is on the cusp of its own heuristic era. 鈥净耻谤颈蝉迟颈肠蝉鈥 will be prominent in finding queasy instances, which have the right structure so that classical methods struggle but quantum algorithms can exploit, to eventually arrive at solutions to typical real-world problems. After all, quantum computing is well-suited for small-data big-compute problems, and our framework employs the concepts to quantify that; instance complexity captures both their size and the amount of compute required to solve them.

Most importantly, queasy instances shift the conversation. Instead of asking the broad question of when quantum computers will surpass classical ones, we can now rigorously ask where they do. The queasy framework provides a language and a compass for navigating the rugged and jagged computational landscape, pointing researchers, engineers, and industries toward quantum advantage.

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Blog
September 15, 2025
Quantum World Congress 2025

From September 16th 鈥 18th, (QWC) brought together visionaries, policymakers, researchers, investors, and students from across the globe to discuss the future of quantum computing in Tysons, Virginia.

夜色直播 is forging the path to universal, fully fault-tolerant quantum computing with our integrated full-stack. With our quantum experts were on site, we showcased the latest on 夜色直播 Systems, the world鈥檚 highest-performing, commercially available quantum computers, our new software stack featuring the key additions of Guppy and Selene, our path to error correction, and more.

Highlights from QWC

Dr. Patty Lee Named the Industry Pioneer in Quantum

The Quantum Leadership Awards celebrate visionaries transforming quantum science into global impact. This year at QWC, Dr. Patty Lee, our Chief Scientist for Hardware Technology Development, was named the Industry Pioneer in Quantum! This honor celebrates her more than two decades of leadership in quantum computing and her pivotal role advancing the world鈥檚 leading trapped-ion systems. .

Keynote with 夜色直播's CEO,聽Dr. Rajeeb聽Hazra

At QWC 2024, 夜色直播鈥檚 President & CEO, Dr. Rajeeb 鈥淩aj鈥 Hazra, took the stage to showcase our commitment to advancing quantum technologies through the unveiling of our roadmap to universal, fully fault-tolerant quantum computing by the end of this decade. This year at QWC 2025, Raj shared the progress we鈥檝e made over the last year in advancing quantum computing on both commercial and technical fronts and exciting insights on what鈥檚 to come from 夜色直播. .

Panel Session:聽Policy Priorities for Responsible Quantum and AI

As part of the Track Sessions on Government & Security, 夜色直播鈥檚 Director of Government Relations, Ryan McKenney, discussed 鈥淧olicy Priorities for Responsible Quantum and AI鈥 with Jim Cook from Actions to Impact Strategies and Paul Stimers from Quantum Industry Coalition.

Fireside Chat:聽Establishing a Pro-Innovation Regulatory Framework

During the Track Session on Industry Advancement, 夜色直播鈥檚 Chief Legal Officer, Kaniah Konkoly-Thege,聽and Director of Government Relations, Ryan McKenney, discussed the importance of 鈥淓stablishing a Pro-Innovation Regulatory Framework鈥.

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Blog
September 15, 2025
Quantum gravity in the lab

In the world of physics, ideas can lie dormant for decades before revealing their true power. What begins as a quiet paper in an academic journal can eventually reshape our understanding of the universe itself.

In 1993, nestled deep in the halls of Yale University, physicist Subir Sachdev and his graduate student Jinwu Ye stumbled upon such an idea. Their work, originally aimed at unraveling the mysteries of 鈥渟pin fluids鈥, would go on to ignite one of the most surprising and profound connections in modern physics鈥攁 bridge between the strange behavior of quantum materials and the warped spacetime of black holes.

Two decades after the paper was published, it would be pulled into the orbit of a radically different domain: quantum gravity. Thanks to work by renowned physicist Alexei Kitaev in 2015, the model found new life as a testing ground for the mind-bending theory of holography鈥攖he idea that the universe we live in might be a projection, from a lower-dimensional reality.

Holography is an exotic approach to understanding reality where scientists use holograms to describe higher dimensional systems in one less dimension. So, if our world is 3+1 dimensional (3 spatial directions plus time), there exists a 2+1, or 3-dimensional description of it. In the words of Leonard Susskind, a pioneer in quantum holography, "the three-dimensional world of ordinary experience鈥攖he universe filled with galaxies, stars, planets, houses, boulders, and people鈥攊s a hologram, an image of reality coded on a distant two-dimensional surface." 聽

The 鈥淪YK鈥 model, as it is known today, is now considered a quintessential framework for studying strongly correlated quantum phenomena, which occur in everything from superconductors to strange metals鈥攁nd even in black holes. In fact, The SYK model has also been used to study one of physics鈥 true final frontiers, quantum gravity, with the authors of the paper calling it 鈥渁 paradigmatic model for quantum gravity in the lab.鈥 聽

The SYK model involves Majorana fermions, a type of particle that is its own antiparticle. A key feature of the model is that these fermions are all-to-all connected, leading to strong correlations. This connectivity makes the model particularly challenging to simulate on classical computers, where such correlations are difficult to capture. Our quantum computers, however, natively support all-to-all connectivity making them a natural fit for studying the SYK model.

Now, 10 years after Kitaev鈥檚 watershed lectures, we鈥檝e made new progress in studying the SYK model. In a new paper, . By exploiting our system鈥檚 native high fidelity and all-to-all connectivity, as well as our scientific team鈥檚 deep expertise across many disciplines, we were able to study the SYK model at a scale three times larger than the previous best experimental attempt.

While this work does not exceed classical techniques, it is very close to the classical state-of-the-art. The biggest ever classical study was done on 64 fermions, while our recent result, run on our smallest processor (System Model H1), included 24 fermions. Modelling 24 fermions costs us only 12 qubits (plus one ancilla) making it clear that we can quickly scale these studies: our System Model H2 supports 56 qubits (or ~100 fermions), and Helios, which is coming online this year, will have over 90 qubits (or ~180 fermions).

However, working with the SYK model takes more than just qubits. The SYK model has a complex Hamiltonian that is difficult to work with when encoded on a computer鈥攓uantum or classical. Studying the real-time dynamics of the SYK model means first representing the initial state on the qubits, then evolving it properly in time according to an intricate set of rules that determine the outcome. This means deep circuits (many circuit operations), which demand very high fidelity, or else an error will occur before the computation finishes.

Our cross-disciplinary team worked to ensure that we could pull off such a large simulation on a relatively small quantum processor, laying the groundwork for quantum advantage in this field.

First, the team adopted a to run the simulation. By using random sampling, among other methods, the TETRIS algorithm allows one to compute the time evolution of a system without the pernicious discretization errors or sizable overheads that plague other approaches. TETRIS is particularly suited to simulating the SYK model because with a high level of disorder in the material, simulating the SYK Hamiltonian means averaging over many random Hamiltonians. With TETRIS, one generates random circuits to compute evolution (even with a deterministic Hamiltonian). Therefore, when applying TETRIS on SYK, for every shot one can just generate a random instance of the Hamiltonain, and generate a random circuit on TETRIS at the same time. This simple approach enables less gate counts required per shot, meaning users can run more shots, naturally mitigating noise.

In addition, the team 鈥渟parsified鈥 the SYK model, which means 鈥減runing鈥 the fermion interactions to reduce the complexity while still maintaining its crucial features. By combining sparsification and the TETRIS algorithm, the team was able to significantly reduce the circuit complexity, allowing it to be run on our machine with high fidelity.

They didn鈥檛 stop there. The team also proposed two new noise mitigation techniques, ensuring that they could run circuits deep enough without devolving entirely into noise. The two techniques both worked quite well, and the team was able to show that their algorithm, combined with the noise mitigation, performed significantly better and delivered more accurate results. The perfect agreement between the circuit results and the true theoretical results is a remarkable feat coming from a co-design effort between algorithms and hardware.

As we scale to larger systems, we come closer than ever to realizing quantum gravity in the lab, and thus, answering some of science鈥檚 biggest questions.

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