
A UK academic research team from King’s College London gained access to Google’s quantum computer chip Willow through a scheme with the UK’s national quantum lab. Quantum computers can, in theory, solve problems beyond the reach of conventional computers. Google reports Willow can solve a theoretical problem in five minutes that would take today’s fastest supercomputers about 10 septillion years. The project aims to use quantum computing to investigate natural processes driven by interactions among many fundamental particles. Understanding these processes could support better solar cells, more efficient energy grid systems, and drug discovery for previously untreatable diseases. Willow is described as incorporating key breakthroughs that enable progress toward useful, large-scale quantum computing.
"Google Scientists from King's College London have become the first UK academic research team to gain access to Google's cutting-edge quantum computer chip Willow as part of a scheme launched with the UK's national quantum lab last year. Quantum computers can in theory solve problems which the most powerful conventional computers cannot. Google says Willow can solve a theoretical problem in five minutes which would take the world's current fastest super computers 10 septillion - or 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 - years to complete."
"King's lead for the project Dr Eleanor Crane said its use of Willow would "light a torch" for research to answer questions about the most important natural processes. "It would be useful if society could understand how plants transform sunlight into energy, find materials which transport electricity quickly, or how molecules bind to each other," said Crane, who will co-lead the research team alongside Dr Alexander Schuckert from ENS Paris."
"These natural processes rely on the interactions between many fundamental particles which made up the building blocks of life. But some questions are really hard to answer with the computers or even supercomputers we currently use. "If we could get to grips with these processes, then we could use this understanding to create better solar cells, more efficient energy grid systems, and discover drugs for previously untreatable diseases," she said."
"While much of this field is still theoretical, Google says Willow incorporates key "breakthroughs" and "paves the way to a useful, large-scale quantum computer". Crane said in the UK, Europe, the US, China, and elsewhere, there have been "huge developments" in this direction. "Quantum comput"
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