Washington DC, Sept. 21 -- Engineers discovered how to make atomic nuclei "talk" inside silicon chips, opening the door to scalable quantum computers.
Researchers at the University of South Wales (UNSW) have found a way to make atomic nuclei communicate through electrons, allowing them to achieve entanglement at scales used in today's computer chips. This breakthrough brings scalable, silicon-based quantum computing much closer to reality.
UNSW engineers have made a significant advance in quantum computing: they created 'quantum entangled states' - where two separate particles become so deeply linked they no longer behave independently - using the spins of two atomic nuclei.
Such states of entanglement are the key resource that gives q...
		
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