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Deutsche Telekom to offer IBM quantum computing in the cloud – Capacity Media

The unit will offer one-day introductory sessions and business-case proofs-of-concept that last several months, it said today.

TSystems CEO Adel Al-Saleh (pictured) said: Quantum computing will be central to tomorrows IT landscape. We are combining quantum and classical computing in a seamless and scalable customer experience.

The company will offer its customers with cloud access to IBMs quantum systems, including multiple quantum computers powered by the 127-qubit IBM Eagle processor.

Deutsche Telekom said this announcement sees its IT subsidiary embark on the path to providing access to this technology, as well as insights on how it can be applicable to its customers businesses. In addition, T-Systems will offer dedicated quantum know-how and training.

Taking these first decisive steps will lower the access barrier to quantum computing, said Al-Saleh.

The company said customers will have access to TSystems quantum services in a set of different customizable packages.

TSystems will develop and test customers use-cases via cloud access to IBMs quantum systems, but said it aims to host its own quantum infrastructure in the future, assisted by IBM. Al-Saleh said: In IBM, we have a trusted partner to deliver this future technology. It is a perfect match for our industry focus and expertise.

Scott Crowder, VP of IBMs quantum adoption and business development, said: By partnering with TSystems as a cloud provider, we will be able to offer access to quantum technology to an even broader ecosystem.

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Fujitsu and Osaka University Develop New Quantum Computing … – HPCwire

TOKYO and OSAKA, Japan, March 23, 2023 Fujitsu and Osaka Universitys Center for Quantum Information and Quantum Biology (QIQB) today revealed the development of a new, highly efficient analog rotation quantum computing architecture, representing a significant milestone toward the realization of practical quantum computing.

The new architecture reduces the number of physical qubits required for quantum error correction a prerequisite for the realization of fault-tolerant quantum computing by 90% from 1 million to 10,000 qubits. This breakthrough will allow research to embark on the construction of a quantum computer with 10,000 physical qubits and 64 logical qubits, which corresponds to computing performance of approximately 100,000 times that of the peak performance of conventional high performance computers.

Moving forward, Fujitsu and Osaka University will further refine this new architecture to lead the development of quantum computers in the early FTQC era, with the aim of applying quantum computing applications to a wide range of practical societal issues including material development and finance.

Error Correction for Fault-tolerant Computing: Making Practical Quantum a Reality

Gate-based quantum computers are expected to revolutionize research in a wide range of fields including quantum chemistry and complex financial systems, as they will offer significantly higher calculation performance than current classical computers. Logical qubits, which consist of multiple physical qubits, play a major key role in quantum error correction technology, and ultimately the realization of practical quantum computers that can provide fault-tolerant results.

Within conventional quantum computing architectures, calculations are performed using a combination of four error-corrected universal quantum gates (CNOT, H, S, and T gate). Within these architectures, especially quantum error correction for T-gates requires a large number of physical qubits, and rotation of the state vector in the quantum calculation requires repeated logical T-gate operations for approximately fifty times on average. Thus, the realization of a genuine fault-tolerant quantum computer is estimated to require more than one million physical qubits in total.

For this reason, quantum computers in the early FTQC era using conventional architecture for quantum error correction can only conduct calculations on a very limited scale below that of classical computers, as they work with a maximum of about 10,000 physical qubits, a number far below that required for genuine, fault-tolerant quantum computing.

To address these issues, Fujitsu and Osaka University developed a new, highly efficient analog rotation quantum computing architecture that is able to significantly reduce the number of physical qubits required for quantum error correction, and enable even quantum computers with 10,000 physical qubits to perform better than current classical computers, accelerating progress toward the realization of genuine, fault-tolerant quantum computing.

Fujitsu and Osaka University have been promoting joint R&D in quantum error correction technology including new quantum computation architectures for the early FTQC era at the Fujitsu Quantum Computing Joint Research Division, a collaborative research effort of the QIQB, established on October 1, 2021 at the campus of Osaka University as part of Fujitsus Fujitsu Small Research Laboratory program.

About the Newly Developed Quantum Computing Architecture

By redefining the universal quantum gate set, Fujitsu and Osaka University succeeded in implementing a phase rotating gate a world first which enables highly efficient phase rotation, a process which previously required a high number of physical qubits and quantum gate operations.

In contrast to conventional architectures that required repeated logical T-gate operations using a large number of physical qubits, gate operation within the new architecture is performed by phase rotating directly to any specified angle.

In this way, the two parties succeeded in reducing the number of qubits required for quantum error correction to around 10% of existing technologies, and the number of gate operations required for arbitrary rotation to approx. 5% of conventional architectures. In addition, Fujitsu and Osaka University suppressed quantum error probability in physical qubits to about 13%, thus achieving highly accurate calculations.

The newly developed computing architecture lays the foundation for the construction of a quantum computer with 10,000 physical qubits and 64 logical qubits, which corresponds to computing performance of approximately 100,000 times that of the peak performance of conventional high performance computers.

About Fujitsu

Fujitsus purpose is to make the world more sustainable by building trust in society through innovation. As the digital transformation partner of choice for customers in over 100 countries, our 124,000 employees work to resolve some of the greatest challenges facing humanity. Fujitsus range of services and solutions draw on five key technologies: Computing, Networks, AI, Data & Security, and Converging Technologies, which we bring together to deliver sustainability transformation. Fujitsu Limited (TSE:6702) reported consolidated revenues of 3.6 trillion yen (US$32 billion) for the fiscal year ended March 31, 2022 and remains the top digital services company in Japan by market share.

About Osaka University

Osaka University was founded in 1931 as one of the seven imperial universities of Japan and is now one of Japans leading comprehensive universities with a broad disciplinary spectrum. This strength is coupled with a singular drive for innovation that extends throughout the scientific process, from fundamental research to the creation of applied technology with positive economic impacts. Its commitment to innovation has been recognized in Japan and around the world, being named Japans most innovative university in 2015 (Reuters 2015 Top 100) and one of the most innovative institutions in the world in 2017 (Innovative Universities and the Nature Index Innovation 2017). Now, Osaka University is leveraging its role as a Designated National University Corporation selected by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology to contribute to innovation for human welfare, sustainable development of society, and social transformation.

Source: Fujitsu

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Quantum computing and seagliders mark the week’s defense … – Washington Technology

At the start of March, the venture capital arms of two blue chip defense hardware companies revealed a pair of investments in startup technology companies as part of the constant search for "what's next."

Roughly two weeks on from that, the venture organizations of Lockheed Martin and Raytheon Technologies have a new pair of investments in emerging firms to talk about.

Here are their latest finds announced Wednesday.

Lockheed Martin Ventures

For this team of the world's largest defense company, identifying creations of promise in power and propulsion is a top priority as they look to bring those technologies into the military environment.

REGENT, a maker of electric-powered sea vehicles, represents the newest investment of Lockheed Martin Ventures and follows on from the backing of electric motor manufacturer H3X Technologies announced at the beginning of March. Terms of the investment in REGENTwhich stands forRegional Electric Ground Effect Nautical Transportwere not disclosed.

As REGENT and Lockheed see things: The Defense Department wants to incorporate high-speed, low-cost, low-signature, runway-independent mobility into maritime vehicles. REGENT designs its seagliders to travel at airplane-like speeds for up to 180 miles between destinations on all-electric, zero-emission power.

The company was founded in late 2020 and touts having secured $7.9 billion in orders since then from major airlines and leading ferry operators. REGENT plans to use Lockheed's investment for adapting the seagliders for use in defense missions such as logistics resupply, cargo transport, and search and rescue.

We believe that REGENT seagliders can bring tailored solutions to the future battlespace," Chris Moran, vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin Ventures, said in a release. This investment reflects our commitment to innovating technologies that have the potential to transform the way we adapt to our customers needs and support mission success."

"We see defense strategy evolving toward an island-hopping force featuring agile, affordable, and distributed craft, REGENT's co-founder and chief executive Billy Thalheimer added. This investment is a strong signal that seagliders can fill this immediate need in the high-priority missions faced by our Department of Defense."

RTX Ventures

This division of Raytheon Technologies is one of several investors that are committing capital to Strangeworks, a five-year-old company focused on making quantum computing a reality.

Strangeworks fetched $24 million in a Series A funding led by Hitachi's venture capital arm, with RTX Ventures and IBM lined up as new investors. Lightspeed Venture Partners, Great Point Ventures and Ecliptic Capital made follow-on investments into a company they helped stand up with initial seed money.

The idea behind quantum is to increase computing power by encoding information through chains of entangled subatomic particles.

Traditional computers encode information through bits that are represented as either a 1 or 0. But quantum bits, or qubits, work to superimpose that bit value to be both a 1 and 0 at the same time and thus generating more computing power.

Strangeworks secured this funding round for its five-year plan to further develop the quantum computing capability and incorporate artificial intelligence into those new products.

"We believe Strangeworks' platform and their ability to make quantum and high-performance computing more accessible can support a wide range of applications in the aerospace, defense, and commercial sectors," Dan Ateya, president and managing director of RTX Ventures, said in a release.

"Raising the Series A from these exceptional investors in this challenging economic climate sends a clear message to the market on where enterprise companies are placing their bets in the race to create quantum value," Strangeworks' founder and CEO William Hurley added.

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Mikhail Lukin named University Professor Harvard Gazette – Harvard Gazette

Mikhail Lukin, a pioneer and leader in quantum science and quantum computing, has been named a University Professor, Harvards highest honor for faculty.

Beginning July 1, Lukin will hold the University Professorship established by Joshua Friedman 76, M.B.A. 80, J.D. 82, and Beth Friedman in 2017. The chair supports a tenured faculty member who has shown both extraordinary academic accomplishment and leadership within the University community.

A pioneer in applying quantum optics for quantum computing purposes, Professor Lukin is central to the Universitys ambitions in quantum science and engineering, Harvard President Larry Bacow said. As co-director of both the Harvard-MIT Center for Ultracold Atoms and the Harvard Quantum Initiative in Science and Engineering, he produces work that is not only elegant and beautiful, but also enormously promising in its capacity to create innovations that are likely to change many of our lives. It is a pleasure to welcome one of the best quantum information scientists in the world into the ranks of the University Professor.

Lukins work in quantum science and engineering aims to use quantum superposition and quantum entanglement the fundamental phenomena governing the interactions between photons, atoms, molecules, and electrons to create new devices and applications, including quantum computers.

Classical computers, such as smartphones and laptops, depend on binary bits of data denoted as 1s and 0s. Quantum computers use quantum bits, or qubits. Due to quantum superposition, which is the ability of something at the quantum level to be in multiple states at one time, qubits can be 1s, 0s, or both simultaneously. Because of qubits properties, quantum computers can solve highly complex computations in a few hundred minutes that would take a classical computer more than 10,000 years.

A pioneer in applying quantum optics for quantum computing purposes, Professor Lukin is central to the Universitys ambitions in quantum science and engineering.

Larry Bacow, Harvard president

According to Lukin, quantum computing has a potential to transform science and society, and the current era is akin to the early days of transistors and conventional computers, with many exciting opportunities that cut across physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, and computer science.

Quantum is a unique field, truly interdisciplinary, originating from physics, chemistry, and mathematics, with implications to philosophy, and more recently connections to engineering, computer science, business, global security, and public policy. At Harvard we have a truly extraordinary community that includes an exceptional group of students, postdocs, and faculty that closely collaborate across many departments and Schools, making it a very special place to do this work, said Lukin, who is currently the George Vasmer Leverett Professor of Physics. This groups collaborative efforts have already transformed the cutting-edge frontier in this field, and with this professorship, I hope to be able to help elevate this work even further by bringing together scientists and engineers to explore new scientific directions, make new discoveries, and realize applications that address the biggest challenges facing the world.

Lukin grew up in Russia at the end of the Cold War. He has said that those formative years were an unusual time that was extremely challenging, but he was fortunate to be taught by dedicated individuals who piqued his interest in physics and solving scientific problems while he earned his masters degree from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology.

When he arrived in the early 1990s at Texas A&M University in College Station, where he received his doctorate, and later when he came to Harvards Institute for Theoretical Atomic and Molecular Physics as a postdoc, Lukin said that he was very lucky to work with a remarkable group of mentors and peers who took him seriously as a researcher, but also helped him to mature and develop both as a scientist and a member of his community.

Inspired by the influence of his mentors, Lukin has advised or sponsored more than 150 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows. He has also published more than 450 papers and has received several of the top awards in his field, including the I.I. Rabi Prize of American Physical Society (2009), the Willis E. Lamb Award for Quantum Optics and Laser Science (2017), the Charles Hard Townes Award of the Optical Society of America (2021), and the Norman F. Ramsey Prize of American Physical Society (2022).

The first University Professorships were created in 1935 as a means to recognize individuals of distinction working on the frontiers of knowledge, and in such a way as to cross the conventional boundaries of the specialties. With the addition of Lukin, 25 Harvard faculty members across the University currently hold this honor.

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D-Wave hello to another quantum pioneer warned over possible delisting – The Register

D-Wave Quantum Inc is being warned by the New York Stock Exchange that it no longer complies with the regulations that govern listed businesses because its share price has been sitting under $1 for 30 trading days.

The Notice of Non-Compliance specifically Section 802.01C of the Exchange's Listed Company Manual hit the business's desk on March 15, the quantum company confirmed late yesterday.

This does not mean common stock in D-Wave Quantum will be delisted immediately. The business said it had told the NYSE that it "intends to cure the stock price deficiency and to return to compliance."

In a statement it adds that it has six months following the NYSE notice to "regain compliance" but its stock will need to be priced at higher than at least $1 for a 30-day trading period.

If D-Wave Quantum decides the actions it needs to take require shareholder approval, it'll need to tell the NYSE.

"The company intends to consider available alternatives, including but not limited to a reverse stock split, that are subject to shareholder approval," D-Wave says.

Founded in 1999, D-Wave has built itself around a type of quantum computer called a quantum annealing system but more recently started to develop its own quantum gate tech. It has developed five generations of systems so far. Customers include VM, Lockheed Martin and Accenture.

Revenue for the nine months ended 30 September 2022 was $4.8 million, up 24 percent year-on-year, and it recorded a net loss of $37.9 million versus a net loss of $17.7 million, not helped by surging operating expenses.

D-Wave was listed on the NYSE last year after merging with DPCM Capital, a special purpose acquisition company, and is the second such business trying to build a quantum computer to fall foul of stock market regulations.

Startup Rigetti confirmed in February that it was facing a delisting from the Nasdaq because its share price had fallen below the $1 mark, meaning it too was out of compliance with the rules. Rigetti revealed at the time it was also chopping one in four staff to cut costs and had revised its roadmap. The company will also has until July 24 to get back in compliance. Its stock price was $0.64 yesterday, up from $0.53 on Wednesday last week.

Industry experts believe development of a full-blown quantum computer is still way off in the distance.

"Quantum is a peak hype segment and is likely to remain so for the foreseeable future," Gartner VP analyst for Quantum Technologies, AI Infrastructures, and Supercomputing Chirag Dekate told us in February.

"The quantum segment is also highly fragmented with an estimated 600+ startups and some established companies currently operating in the space. This level of market activity is unusual and unsustainable for a market segment that currently does not deliver business value," he added.

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Cleveland Clinic and IBM Unveil First Quantum Computer Dedicated to Healthcare Research – IBM Newsroom

CLEVELAND and ARMONK, N.Y., March 20, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Today,Cleveland Clinic and IBM (NYSE: IBM) officially unveiled the first deployment of an onsite private sector IBM-managed quantum computer in the United States. The IBM Quantum System One installed at Cleveland Clinic will be the first quantum computer in the world to be uniquely dedicated to healthcare research with an aim to help Cleveland Clinic accelerate biomedical discoveries.

The unveiling comes as a key milestone in Cleveland Clinic's and IBM's 10-year Discovery Acceleratorpartnership, announced in 2021, which is focused on advancing the pace of biomedical research through the use of high-performance computing, artificial intelligence and quantum computing. The system was unveiled at a formal event today featuring leaders from IBM and Cleveland Clinic, Susan Monarez, Ph.D., Deputy Director, Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H); Congresswoman Shontel Brown (OH-11); Lt. Governor of Ohio Jon Husted; and Mayor of Cleveland Justin M. Bibb.

Ruoyi Zhou, Director, The IBM Discovery Accelerator at the Cleveland Clinic, Dr. Lara Jehi, Chief Research Information Officer, Cleveland Clinic, Congresswoman Shontel Brown (OH-11), Dario Gil, IBM SVP and Director, Research, Gary Cohn, IBM Vice Chairman, Lt. Governor of Ohio Jon Husted, Dr. Serpil Erzurum, Chief Research and Academic Officer, Cleveland Clinic, Susan Monarez, Ph.D., Deputy Director, Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), Tom Mihaljevic, M.D., Cleveland Clinic CEO and President, and Mayor of Cleveland Justin M. Bibb, in front of IBM Quantum System One at Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Quantum computing is a rapidly emerging technology that harnesses the laws of quantum mechanics to solve problems that today's most powerful supercomputers cannot practically solve. The ability to tap into these new computational spaces could help researchers identify new medicines and treatments more quickly.

"This is a pivotal milestone in our innovative partnership with IBM, as we explore new ways to apply the power of quantum computing to healthcare," said Tom Mihaljevic, M.D., Cleveland Clinic CEO and President and Morton L. Mandel CEO Chair. "This technology holds tremendous promise in revolutionizing healthcare and expediting progress toward new cares, cures and solutions for patients. Quantum and other advanced computing technologies will help researchers tackle historic scientific bottlenecks and potentially find new treatments for patients with diseases like cancer, Alzheimer's and diabetes."

"With the unveiling of IBM Quantum System One at Cleveland Clinic, their team of world-class researchers can now explore and uncover new scientific advancements in biomedical research," said Arvind Krishna, IBM Chairman and CEO. "By combining the power of quantum computing, artificial intelligence and other next-generation technologies with Cleveland Clinic's world-renowned leadership in healthcare and life sciences, we hope to ignite a new era of accelerated discovery."

In addition to quantum computing, the Cleveland Clinic-IBM Discovery Accelerator draws upon a variety of IBM's latest advancements in computing technologies, including high performance computing via the hybrid cloud and artificial intelligence. Researchers from both organizations are collaborating closely on a robust portfolio of projects with these advanced technologies to generate and analyze massive amounts of data to enhance research.

The Cleveland Clinic-IBM Discovery Accelerator has generated multiple projects that leverage the latest in quantum computing, AI and hybrid cloud to help expedite discoveries in biomedical research. These include:

The Discovery Accelerator also serves as the technology foundation for Cleveland Clinic's Global Center for Pathogen & Human Health Research,part of the Cleveland Innovation District. The center, supported by a $500 million investment from the State of Ohio, Jobs Ohio and Cleveland Clinic, brings together a team focused on studying, preparing and protecting against emerging pathogens and virus-related diseases. Through the Discovery Accelerator, researchers are leveraging advanced computational technology to expedite critical research into treatments and vaccines.

A significant part of the collaboration is a focus on educating the workforce of the future and creating jobs to grow the economy. An innovative educational curriculumis being designed for participants from high school to the professional level, offering training and certification programs in data science, machine learning and quantum computing to build the skilled workforce needed for cutting-edge computational research of the future.

Additionally, the two organizations are hosting research symposia, seminars and workshops intended for academia, industry, government and the public with a goal of building a critical mass of computing specialists in Cleveland.

About Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinicis a nonprofit multispecialty academic medical center that integrates clinical and hospital care with research and education. Located in Cleveland, Ohio, it was founded in 1921 by four renowned physicians with a vision of providing outstanding patient care based upon the principles of cooperation, compassion and innovation. Cleveland Clinic has pioneered many medical breakthroughs, including coronary artery bypass surgery and the first face transplant in the United States. U.S. News & World Report consistently names Cleveland Clinic as one of the nation's best hospitals in its annual "America's Best Hospitals" survey. Among Cleveland Clinic's 77,000 employees worldwide are more than 5,658 salaried physicians and researchers, and 19,000 registered nurses and advanced practice providers, representing 140 medical specialties and subspecialties. Cleveland Clinic is a 6,665-bed health system that includes a 173-acre main campus near downtown Cleveland, 22 hospitals, more than 275 outpatient facilities, including locations in northeast Ohio; southeast Florida; Las Vegas, Nevada; Toronto, Canada; Abu Dhabi, UAE; and London, England. In 2022, there were 12.8 million outpatient encounters, 303,000 hospital admissions and observations, and 270,000 surgeries and procedures throughout Cleveland Clinic's health system. Patients came for treatment from every state and 185 countries.

Visit us at clevelandclinic.org. Follow us at twitter.com/ClevelandClinic. News and resources available at newsroom.clevelandclinic.org.

About IBM

IBM is a leading global hybrid cloud and AI, and business services provider, helping clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs and gain the competitive edge in their industries. Nearly 3,800 government and corporate entities in critical infrastructure areas such as financial services, telecommunications and healthcare rely on IBM's hybrid cloud platform and Red Hat OpenShift to affect their digital transformations quickly, efficiently and securely. IBM's breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and business services deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM's legendary commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service. For more information, visit https://research.ibm.com.

Contacts:

Sarah BenchaitaIBM Research281-455-6432Sarah.benchaita@ibm.com

Alicia RealeCleveland Clinic216-408-7444Realeca@ccf.org

Ellie WesterburgCleveland Clinic216-312-4755westere@ccf.org

SOURCE IBM

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IBM and Cleveland Clinic are deploying the first on-site quantum computer in health care as tech promises to accelerate scientific breakthroughs -…

Today, when researchers set out to design new drugs for diseases like cancer or Alzheimers, they know the process will be slow and sporadic at best. Traditional approaches to scientific research face bottlenecks arising from the process, cost, and complexity of the work, along with the amount of time it takes for classical computers to analyze massive amounts of data.

But what if instead of attempting to discover and design new drugs and medicines using simple binary digits, we could use something that dramatically changes how we analyze data and what can be discovered from it? Something that could bring new therapies and cures much faster to patients in need.

Technological advances lead to conceptual leaps in knowledge and the discovery of previously unimagined new paradigms. Thats one of the promises of quantum computing, a rapidly emerging technology that harnesses the laws of quantum mechanics to explore problems that are too complex for classical computers to solve. Quantum computers hold the potential to run vast simulations to design better drugs and treatments at breathtaking speeds.

When most Americans learn about technologies like quantum computing, they probably assume that it comes from Silicon Valley. After all, were accustomed to innovation taking the form of digital apps and platforms designed by programmers who work in front of a keyboard. That model has produced countless advancements in recent yearsbut it isnt the only way groundbreaking progress can be made.

The truth is that many of our most vital breakthroughs in health and medicine have emerged not from the coasts, but from the heartlandwhere, for more than a century, Cleveland Clinic has stood at the forefront of innovation. From discovering serotonin in the 1940s and pioneering bypass surgery in the 1960s to identifying how the microbiome benefits human health in the past decade, Cleveland Clinic teams of researchers and clinicians have investigated the problems of our patients and innovated solutions.

These discoveries have impacted health care. But they have come with a steep cost: Time. On average, it takes more than 15 years for a scientific discovery in a biomedical research lab to become a tangible therapy or diagnostic test available to patients. Not to mention, this process can take up to $100 million. With emerging technologies such as quantum computing, artificial intelligence, and cloud, we can change this. What once took decades could now be achieved in months and can become more affordable and less time-intensive for research teams.

Thats why IBM is partnering with Cleveland Clinic to introduce the first quantum computer ever deployed on site in the private sectorand the first in the world dedicated to biomedical and health research. Unveiled this week at its permanent home on Cleveland Clinics campus in Ohio, IBM Quantum System One is part of a groundbreaking effort to significantly speed up the pace of scientific breakthroughs.

For researchers at Cleveland Clinic, it means the chance to develop more precise, targeted, and effective medicinesand more accurately predict which patients will encounter life-threatening and chronic diseases.

For people across the country, it means the potential to make major leaps forward in the fight against complex diseasesand a new technology platform that can serve as a model for every region to make breakthroughs of their own.

For Clevelanders and Northeast Ohioans, it means well-paying jobs in cutting-edge fields. It strengthens the citys position as a globally recognized hub of innovation. And it sends a clear message to the nation and the world that the American heartland is a place where the future is being written.

We dont yet know precisely which breakthroughs quantum computing will help us achieveand which medicines, models, vaccines, and therapies they could make possible.

But we do know that by working to dramatically reduce the time it takes to investigate the most complex mysteries of human health, this effort will close the gap between imagination and discoverybetween the impossible and the possible. Quantum and other advanced computing technologies will help us expedite progress toward new treatments and cures for our patients.

We are grateful to the city of Cleveland, the state of Ohio, and all of the local, state, and national leaders who have made this work possible by investing in pioneering research and in our scientific infrastructure.

We are excited to embark on this journey of discoverydelivering more jobs to the heartland, more opportunities to the nation, and more medical breakthroughs to the world.

Serpil Erzurum, M.D., is Cleveland Clinics chief research and academic officer. Daro Gil is IBMs SVP and director of research.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs ofFortune.

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Cleveland Clinic unveils IBM quantum computer; partnership aims to accelerate healthcare innovation – cleveland.com

CLEVELAND, Ohio A shiny cylinder hanging upside down in a clear cube has put Cleveland at the forefront of quantum computing and medical innovation.

The cylinder is the IBM Quantum System One, an advanced quantum computer that can handle large amounts of data at lightning speeds. The Cleveland Clinic on Monday hosted a ribbon-cutting and reception to unveil the IBM Quantum System One in its new home on the Clinics main campus.

It is the first quantum computer in the world uniquely dedicated to healthcare research.

The Clinic will use the most advanced computational platform in the world to advance discoveries in medicine and health care, identify new medicines and treatments more quickly, and create jobs in technology, Clinic CEO Dr. Tom Mihaljevic said.

The IBM Quantum System One is the first private sector IBM-managed quantum computer in the United States.

This puts Cleveland on the cutting edge of anything happening on the planet, Ohio Lt. Governor Jon Husted said after cutting a ceremonial ribbon in front of the quantum computer with other dignitaries. About 200 leaders from the Clinic, politics, IBM, philanthropy and other sectors attended the reception.

The unveiling of the IBM quantum computer is a key milestone in a 10-year partnership between the Clinic and IBM, called the Discovery Accelerator. The partnership, first announced in 2021, is focused on advancing biomedical research through the use of high-performance computing, artificial intelligence and quantum computing, the Clinic said.

Husted recalled how he urged Clinic leaders to ask IBM for a quantum computer when he visited Cleveland for the presidential debate between then-President Donald Trump and Joe Biden in 2020.

Literally, this is the coolest thing on the planet, Husted said, referring to the quantum computers super-cooled interior. It can solve some of the most complex healthcare questions right here in Cleveland and Ohio.

Other dignitaries in attendance included Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb, U.S. Rep. Shontel Brown, IBM Senior Vice President and Director of Research Dario Gil, and IBM Vice Chairman Gary Cohn.

Quantum computing, which is still in development, is a new type of computing that is based on quantum phenomenon, not ones and zeros in a conventional computer. It will be able to crunch larger amounts of data at speeds that regular computers cant match.

Here is an explainer from Technology Review: Quantum machines are so powerful because they harness quantum bits, or qubits. Unlike classical bits, which represent either a 1 or a 0, qubits can be in a kind of combination of both at the same time. Thanks to other quantum phenomena, which are described in our explainer here, quantum computers can crunch large amounts of data in parallel that conventional machines have to work through sequentially. Scientists have been working for years to demonstrate that the machines can definitively outperform conventional ones.

The Clinics quantum computer is about three feet in diameter and five feet long.

Inside the quantum computers cylinder, qubits are arranged on a processor chip. Microwave packets of energy alter the qubits state to change the information that they store.

The microwave packets of energy are then sent through metallic tubes arrayed to look like a chandelier, explained Dr. Lara Jehi, chief research information officer for the Clinic.

The packets of energy travel to the quantum computers processor chip, which is cooled to temperatures near absolute zero in order to make them stable and able to hold information, Jehi said.

A researcher anywhere on the Clinic campus can communicate with the quantum computer using a conventional computer loaded with special software. Answers are translated back to ones and zeros, and sent to the conventional computer.

In a 2019 research paper, researchers at Google said its quantum computer could run a computation in 200 seconds that would take the worlds largest supercomputers 10,000 years to complete. Googles paper was published in the journal Nature.

At the Clinic, quantum computing will be used for chemical simulations for finding new molecules for drug use, understanding complex systems and sequencing genes in cancer cells, Jehi said previously.

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The potential threat of quantum computing – TechHQ

Quantum computing by its very nature is set to revolutionize how we think about computers and how we use them. But if the tech world knows one thing down to the chill in the marrow of its bones, its that every opportunity brings the shadow of a threat in its wake and vice versa.

In September, 2022, UN Secretary-General Antnio Guterres included quantum computing among his list of perceived techno-threats for the times in which we live, claiming it could destroy cybersecurity.

The idea of any single breakthrough being able to destroy the whole notion of cybersecurity sounds like the plot of an as-yet-unmade James Bond movie (Hey, Eon Productions Ltd call us).

We sat down with Dr Ali El Kaafarani, a research fellow at Oxford Universitys Mathematical Institute, and founder of PQShield, to ask him whether the sky was really falling in.

THQ:

What exactly is the threat of quantum computing? Among everything else there is to worry about, whats the scope and the scale of the quantum threat? Why should we take it seriously?

AEK:

Quantum computers will have the power to solve computational problems that were previously thought impossible for a standard computer to crack. While this presents many opportunities, it also poses a significant security risk as it renders the traditional encryption methods used to protect virtually all of the worlds sensitive information obsolete.

Important and sensitive data, even when encrypted, is constantly being stolen and stored by bad actors who hope to decipher it one day. This is known as a harvest now, decrypt later attack. When powerful quantum computers arrive, all our data will be vulnerable to this kind of retrospective attack.

According to the US National Academy of Sciences, an initial quantum computer prototype capable of breaking current encryption methods could be developed in the next decade.

THQ:

Well thats pretty chilling.

AEK:

For nation states, the intelligence value of reaching this threshold is almost impossible to quantify. NIST says that once this threshold has been crossed, nothing can be done to protect the confidentiality of encrypted material that was previously stored by an adversary. Thats why data needs to be protected with quantum-resistant encryption today, even before these machines are a reality.

THQ:

So, when the Secretary-General said quantum computing could destroy cybersecurity, there wasnt even a hint of hyperbole in there? Any idea when within the next decade this could happen?

AEK:

According to Booz Allen Hamilton, the anticipated cracking of encryption by quantum computers must be treated as a current threat. Only late last year, top former US national security officials including the Deputy Director of National Intelligence, warned the world that the danger of these types of attacks was immediate.

THQ:

Well its been nice sleeping at night. So, for instance, how do businesses that want to outlive this development assess their vulnerability to quantum attack? What stages does such an assessment come in?

AEK:

There are many who recognize the seriousness of the quantum threat but dont actually know how to go about protecting themselves against it, or who feel overwhelmed thinking about the overhaul associated with migrating their systems to meet a new set of standards.

THQ:

We can imagine the overwhelm, certainly.

AEK:

However, if you break it down into smaller steps, the migration process is not so daunting.Transitioning from cryptosystem to cryptosystem is no trivial task, which is why it is best to start as early as possible.

As the NIST National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence (NCCoE) points out: It is critical to begin planning for the replacement of hardware, software and services that use public-key algorithms now, so that the information is protected from future attacks.

Switching from one cryptosystem to another within a given security solution is unlikely to be a simple drop-in task, particularly for businesses that havent even begun planning for the post-quantum transition, which is likely to be the biggest cryptographic transition in decades.

THQ:

So were thinking this is not a particularly straightforward job?

AEK:

Well, the ease or difficulty with which certain cryptographic algorithms can be switched out in embedded hardware and software will determine the speed with which a transition can be achieved. Crypto-agility allows for a smoother transition between standards. If a system is crypto-agile, it means it is built with flexibility and futureproofing in mind, with cryptographic algorithms that are easy to update and replace over time with minimal disruption to the overall system.

THQ:

So the more agile a business is and the sooner it starts getting to grip with the invisible ticking clock of the quantum threat the more likely it is to be able to ride out the new paradigm?

Once businesses have an understanding of their quantum computing vulnerability, what can they actually do about it?

AEK:

We dont yet know for certain that a high-functioning quantum computer exists, because it is not unfeasible that a bad actor would choose to conceal its existence in order to maintain its technical advantage along with the element of surprise. The prudent way forward is to start preparing for the worst now because its a question of when, not if.

Post-quantum cryptography standards were announced in July last year. The first draft standards will be published in the next couple of months, with the final versions ready in the first half of 2024. In the meantime, it is possible and advised to use hybrid cryptography libraries that can support both classical and post-quantum standards in the transition phase.

In the meantime, businesses can ensure that their cryptography is FIPS 140-3 compliant. FIPS 140-3 is a good stopgap to aim for until more tailored standards are introduced, and because it is a mandatory standard for the protection of sensitive data within US and Canadian federal systems, it is a prerequisite for any contractors that want to do business with these governments.

Another place to look is the Department of Homeland Security, which published a post-quantum cryptography roadmap a useful guideline for establishing a transition plan before standards are finalized.

THQ:

Are we confident that NISTs new cryptographic standards are sufficient to meet the quantum threat of today? And is the threat likely to evolve as we go forward?

AEK:

Because the future capabilities of quantum computers remain an open question, NIST has taken a variety of mathematical approaches to safeguard encryption. Each mathematical approach has different advantages and disadvantages in terms of its practicality, implementation and design.

The logic to all this is that future research may discover new attacks or weaknesses that can be exploited to render any one particular algorithm obsolete. Its why NIST may ultimately choose multiple algorithms to standardize and hold another handful close at hand as backup options.

THQ:

If, as we gather, the threat is likely to evolve, how do we prepare now to meet it? Whats the scope for quantum cryptographic security over, say, the next five years?

AEK:

Meeting the threat relies on implementing post-quantum cryptography. So, naturally, in the next five years, well see different sectors moving to adopt post-quantum cryptography. In some cases, this wont be by choice they will be following mandatory timelines set out by the US Government and others.

Remember, according to the US National Academy of Sciences, a quantum computer prototype capable of breaking current encryption methods could be developed within the next decade.

By 2030, it will surprise no-one if there are fully functioning quantum computers already.

Dr Ali El Kaafarani, CEO of PQShield.

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Nvidia positions for quantum computing with new products – Reuters

March 21 (Reuters) - Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O), the computing company powering the bulk of artificial intelligence, is positioning itself as a key player in quantum computing with the launch of new software and hardware.

On Tuesday at its developer conference GTC, Nvidia unveiled CUDA Quantum, a platform for building quantum algorithms using popular classical computer coding languages C++ and python. The program would help run the algorithm across quantum and classical computers depending on which system is most efficient in solving the problem.

The new platform is named after CUDA, the software most AI developers use to access Nvidia's graphics processing unit (GPU) and which has given Nvidia chips a huge competitive edge.

"CUDA Quantum will do the same for quantum computing, enabling domain scientists to seamlessly integrate quantum into their applications and gain access to a new disruptive computing technology," said Tim Costa, Nvidia's director of HPC and quantum.

One difference, Costa said, is while CUDA is proprietary, CUDA Quantum is open source and was developed with input from many quantum computing companies.

Nvidia also launched a new hardware system called DGX Quantum to connect the quantum computer with classical computers. It was designed in partnership with Israeli-based startup Quantum Machines whose hardware communicates with quantum processors.

"We see more and more demand to integrate these quantum computers with standard computers," said Itamar Sivan, co-founder and CEO of Quantum Machines.

While quantum computers could potentially speed up some calculations millions of times faster than the fastest supercomputer, it is still uncertain when that would happen. And even when they become good enough to be useful, they would have to be paired with powerful digital computers to operate, said Sivan.

"All quantum today is research, not production, and that isn't going to change next week," said Costa. With DGX Quantum, researchers will be able to develop hybrid applications and critical methods for quantum computing's future, he added.

Reporting by Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Thomson Reuters

Reports on global trends in computing from covering semiconductors and tools to manufacture them to quantum computing. Has 27 years of experience reporting from South Korea, China, and the U.S. and previously worked at the Asian Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones Newswires and Reuters TV. In her free time, she studies math and physics with the goal of grasping quantum physics.

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