Caltech Builds World’s Largest Neutral-Atom Quantum Computer
Decrypt
2025-09-29 02:23
Ai Focus
Researchers kept more than 6,000 qubits coherent while operating with 99.98% accuracy. Here's why that matters for quantum computing.
Helpful
No.Help

Author:Quantum trader

Caltech physicists have created the largest neutral-atom quantum computer to date, trapping 6,100 cesium atoms as qubits in a single array. The result, published in Nature on Thursday, represents a significant increase over previous arrays, which contained only hundreds of qubits.

Researchers scaled their system from the hundreds of qubits typical in past experiments to more than 6,000, while maintaining stability and precision at levels needed for practical machines.

The team said it achieved coherence times of about 13 seconds—nearly 10 times longer than past experiments—while performing single-qubit operations with 99.98% accuracy.

A qubit, or quantum bit, is the fundamental unit of information in a quantum computer. Unlike a classical bit—which can be either a 0 or 1—a qubit can exist in a superposition of both states at once, allowing it to perform many calculations in parallel. The challenge is keeping that delicate state stable long enough to run computations.

That stability is called “coherence,” and it’s constantly threatened by noise, heat, or stray electromagnetic fields. The longer a qubit remains coherent, the more complex and reliable the operations a quantum processor can perform before errors creep in.

“This is an exciting moment for neutral-atom quantum computing,” Caltech professor of physics and principal investigator on the project, Manuel Endres, said in a statement. “We can now see a pathway to large error-corrected quantum computers. The building blocks are in place.”

However, according to Caltech graduate student Elie Bataille, who worked on the project, the amount of time is only one factor in the quantum process.

“What you need is a very long coherence time compared to the duration of your operations,” Bataille told Decrypt. “If your operations are one microsecond and you have a second of coherence time, that means you can do about a million operations.”

Scaling without sacrificing fidelity

The researchers used “optical tweezers,” which are highly focused beams of light, to grab and position individual atoms. By splitting a single laser into 12,000 of these tiny light traps, they were able to hold 6,100 atoms steady inside a vacuum chamber.

“If you use a laser at the right wavelength, you can make the light attractive for the atom, creating a trap,” Bataille said. “If you confine your beam of light to a very small dot, about a micrometer, you can attract and trap many atoms.”

The team showed they could move atoms around within the array without breaking their fragile quantum state, known as superposition. That ability to shift qubits while keeping them stable could make it easier to correct errors in future quantum computers.

Neutral-atom quantum systems are gaining attention as viable competitors to superconducting circuits and trapped-ion platforms. One of their unique advantages is physical reconfigurability: atoms can be rearranged during a computation using mobile optical traps, which gives dynamic connectivity that rigid hardware topologies struggle to match. So far, most neutral‐atom arrays have contained only hundreds of qubits, making Caltech’s 6,100-qubit milestone a major step forward.

A global race

The result arrives as companies and labs worldwide scale up quantum machines. IBM has pledged a 100,000-qubit superconducting computer by 2033, while firms like IonQ and QuEra are developing ion-trap and neutral-atom approaches. Colorado-based Quantinuum aims to deliver a fully fault-tolerant quantum computer by 2029.

The next milestone is demonstrating error correction at scale, which will require encoding logical qubits from thousands of physical ones. That is critical if quantum computers are to solve practical problems in chemistry, materials, and beyond.

“A traditional computer makes one error every 10 to 17 operations,” Bataille said. “A quantum computer is nowhere near that accurate, and we don’t expect to reach that level with hardware only.”

The Caltech team plans to link qubits through entanglement, a necessary step for running full-scale quantum computations.

While Caltech’s 6,100-qubit array does not yet deliver a practical quantum computer, by combining scale, accuracy, and coherence in one system, it sets a new benchmark and strengthens the case for neutral atoms as a leading platform in quantum computing.

Tip
$0
Like
0
Save
0
Views 235
CoinMeta reminds readers to view blockchain rationally, stay aware of risks, and beware of virtual token issuance and speculation. All content on this site represents market information or related viewpoints only and does not constitute any form of investment advice. If you find sensitive content, please click“Report”,and we will handle it promptly。
Submit
Comment 0
Hot
Latest
No comments yet. Be the first!
Related
At 3 a.m., I was completely sleepless: Seedance 2.0 tells us that AI is accelerating the "compression" of real-world workflows.
For the first time in a year, I was so amazed by the progress of AI that I couldn't sleep in the middle of the night. I believe that AI's impact on the world is accelerating.
Wall Street CN
·2026-02-09 07:57:29
629
Is SyrupUSDC’s expansion a sign of DeFi’s credit market evolution?
Institutional credit is no longer sitting off-chain; it is now actively fueling DeFi liquidity rails, with structured yields flowing directly into lending markets through tokenized credit instruments.
AMBCrypto
·2026-02-10 13:08:27
555
Giannis Antetokounmpo's investment in Kalshi sparks public outrage: Is it an idol's crossover or an insider trading scheme?
Event contracts surrounding Giannis Antetokounmpo's future on the prediction market platform Kalshi have entered the settlement phase, with a cumulative trading volume exceeding $23.3 million.
BlockBeats
·2026-02-13 18:35:11
221
Gathering Wall Street's Old Money in One Day: LayerZero's "Public Blockchain Transformation" Narrative
What LayerZero received might be an admission ticket, or it might just be an interview opportunity.
BlockBeats
·2026-02-11 16:04:52
803
Ether's recent crash below $2,000 leaves $686 million gaping hole in trading firm's book
The position blew up this week, leaving the firm with a $686 million loss, according to Arkham.
CoinDesk
·2026-02-07 14:03:34
831