Researchers kept more than 6,000 qubits coherent while operating with 99.98% accuracy. Here's why that matters for quantum ...
Computers dominate so many people's lives. Who doesn't log hours of screen time every day on their "phone"—a device that, yes, can initiate or receive telephone calls but mostly serves as a ...
For more than a century, the California Institute of Technology, or Caltech, has been a global beacon of scientific progress and discovery, attracting some of the world’s brightest minds to Pasadena.
Led by CalTech computer science professor Peter Schröder and Wim Sweldens of Bell Labs' Mathematical Sciences Research Center, scientists have developed an algorithm ...
Quantum computers differ from classical ones because their basic units of information, qubits, can exist in two states at once.
A new analysis of how much college graduates earn shows that computer science tops the list of the most lucrative undergraduate degrees. Using data from the U.S. Department of Eduction’s most recently ...
When scientists at Caltech revealed that they had assembled the world’s largest neutral-atom quantum computer, the ...