黑料社

黑料社 Sets New Record with Highest Ever Quantum Volume

Simpler, faster and fewer errors: How arbitrary angle gates help increase H1鈥檚 quantum volume

September 27, 2022
New arbitrary angle gate capabilities enable increase in Quantum Volume (QV) to 8192 as 黑料社 continues to achieve its previously stated objective of increasing its QV by 10x every year; TKET downloads surpass 500,000
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黑料社 President and COO Tony Uttley announced three major accomplishments during his keynote address at the IEEE Quantum Week event in Colorado last week.听

The three milestones, representing actionable acceleration for the quantum computing eco-system, are: (i) new arbitrary angle gate capabilities on the H-series hardware, (ii) another QV record for the System Model H1 hardware, and (iii) over 500,000 downloads of 黑料社鈥檚 open-sourced , a world-leading quantum software development kit (SDK).听

The announcements were made during Uttley鈥檚 keynote address titled, 鈥淎 Measured Approach to Quantum Computing.鈥

These advancements are the latest examples of the company鈥檚 continued demonstration of its leadership in the quantum computing community.听

鈥満诹仙 is accelerating quantum computing鈥檚 impact to the world,鈥 Uttley said. 鈥淲e are making significant progress with both our hardware and software, in addition to building a community of developers who are using our TKET SDK.鈥

This latest quantum volume measurement of 8192 is particularly noteworthy and is the second time this year 黑料社 has published a new QV record on their trapped-ion quantum computing platform, the System Model H1, Powered by Honeywell.听

The plot above shows the growth of measured quantum volume by 黑料社. For each test, the heavy output probability 鈥榟鈥 is listed and the system is identified by the marker type. The dashed grey line shows our target scaling of increasing QV 脳 10 yearly.

A key to achieving this latest record is the new capability of directly implementing arbitrary angle two-qubit gates. For many quantum circuits, this new way of doing a two-qubit gate allows for more efficient circuit construction and leads to higher fidelity results.听

Dr. Brian Neyenhuis, Director of Commercial Operations at 黑料社, said, 鈥淭his new capability allows for several user advantages. In many cases, this includes shorter interactions with the qubits, which lowers the error rate. This allows our customers to run long computations with less noise.鈥

These arbitrary angle gates build on the overall design strength of the trapped-ion architecture of the H1, Neyenhuis said.听

鈥淲ith the quantum-charged coupled device (QCCD) architecture, interactions between qubits are very simple and can be limited to a small number of qubits which means we can precisely control the interaction and don鈥檛 have to worry about additional crosstalk,鈥 he said.听

This new gate design represents a third method for 黑料社 to improve the efficiency of the H1 generation, said Dr. Jenni Strabley, Senior Director of Offering Management at 黑料社.

鈥満诹仙玮檚 goal is to accelerate quantum computing. We know we have to make the hardware better and we have to make the algorithms smarter, and we鈥檙e doing that,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow we can also implement the algorithms more efficiently on our H1 with this new gate design.鈥

A powerful new capability: More information on arbitrary angle gates聽

Currently, researchers can do single qubit gates 鈥 rotations on a single qubit 鈥 or a fully entangling two-qubit gate. It鈥檚 possible to build any quantum operation out of just those building blocks.

With arbitrary angle gates, instead of just having a two-qubit gate that's fully entangling, scientists can use a two-qubit gate that is partially entangling.听

鈥淭here are many algorithms where you want to evolve the quantum state of the system one tiny step at a time. Previously, if you wanted a tiny bit of entanglement for some small time step, you had to entangle it all the way, rotate it a little bit, and then unentangle it almost all the way back,鈥 Neyenhuis said. 鈥淣ow we can just add this tiny little bit of entanglement natively and then go to the next step of the algorithm.鈥

There are other algorithms where this arbitrary angle two-qubit gate is the natural building block, according to Neyenhuis. One example is the quantum Fourier transform. Using arbitrary angle two-qubit gates cuts the number of two-qubit gates (and the overall error) in half, drastically improving the fidelity of the circuit. Researchers can use this new gate design to run harder problems that resulted in catastrophic errors in previous experiments.

鈥淏y going to an arbitrary angle gate, in addition to cutting the number of two-qubit gates in half, the error we get per gate is lower because it scales with the amplitude of that gate,鈥 Neyenhuis said.听

This is a powerful new capability, particularly for noisy intermediate-scale quantum algorithms. Another demonstration from the 黑料社 team was to use arbitrary angle two-qubit gates to study non-equilibrium phase transitions, the technical details of which are .听

鈥淔or the algorithms that we are going to want to run in this NISQ regime that we're in right now, this is a more efficient way to run your algorithm,鈥 Neyenhuis said. 鈥淭here are lots of different circuits you would want to run where this arbitrary angle gate gives you a fairly significant increase in the fidelity of your overall circuit.听This capability also allows for a speed up in the circuit execution by removing unneeded gates, which ultimately reduces the time of executing a job on our machines.鈥

Researchers working with machine learning algorithms, variational algorithms, and time evolution algorithms would see the most benefit from these new gates. This advancement is particularly relevant for simulating the dynamics of other quantum systems.听

鈥淭his just gave us a big win in fidelity because we can run the sort of interaction you're after natively, rather than constructing it out of some other Lego blocks,鈥 Neyenhuis said.听

A new milestone in quantum volume

Quantum volume tests require running arbitrary circuits. At each slice of the quantum volume circuit, the qubits are randomly paired up and a complex two-qubit operation is performed. This SU(4) gate can be constructed more efficiently using the arbitrary angle two-qubit gate, lowering the error at each step of the algorithm.听

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The plot above shows the individual heavy output probability for each circuit in the Quantum Volume 8192 test. The blue line is the cumulative average heavy output probability and the green regions are the cumulative two-sigma confidence interval calculated by the new method.

The H1-1鈥檚 quantum volume of 8192 is due in part to the implementation of arbitrary angle gates and the continued reduction in error rates.听黑料社鈥檚 last quantum volume increase was in April when the System Model H1-2 doubled its performance to become the first commercial quantum computer to pass Quantum Volume 4096.

This new increase is the seventh time in two years that 黑料社鈥檚 H-Series hardware has set an industry record for measured quantum volume as it continues to achieve its goal of 10X annual improvement.

Quantum volume, a benchmark introduced by IBM in 2019, is a way to measure the performance of a quantum computer using randomized circuits, and is a frequently used metric across the industry.听

Building a quantum ecosystem among developers

黑料社 has also achieved another milestone: over 500,000 downloads of .

TKET is an advanced software development kit for writing and running programs on gate-based quantum computers. TKET enables developers to optimize their quantum algorithms, reducing the computational resources required, which is important in the NISQ era.听

TKET is open source and accessible through the PyTKET Python package. The SDK also integrates with major quantum software platforms including Qiskit, Cirq and Q#. has been available as an open source language for almost a year.听

This universal availability and TKET鈥檚 portability across many quantum processors are critical for building a community of developers who can write quantum algorithms. The number of downloads includes many companies and academic institutions which account for multiple users.听

黑料社 CEO Ilyas Khan said, 鈥淲hilst we do not have the exact number of users of TKET, it is clear that we are growing towards a million people around the world who have taken advantage of a critical tool that integrates across multiple platforms and makes those platforms perform better. We continue to be thrilled by the way that TKET helps democratize as well as accelerate innovation in quantum computing.鈥

Arbitrary angle two-qubit gates and other recent 黑料社 advances are all built into TKET.

鈥淭KET is an evolving platform and continues to take advantage of these new hardware capabilities,鈥 said Dr. Ross Duncan, 黑料社鈥檚 Head of Quantum Software. 鈥淲e鈥檙e excited to put these new capabilities into the hands of the rapidly increasing number of TKET users around the world.鈥

Additional Data for Quantum Volume 8192

The average single-qubit gate fidelity for this milestone was 99.9959(5)%, the average two-qubit gate fidelity was 99.71(3)% with fully connected qubits, and state preparation and measurement fidelity was 99.72(1)%. The 黑料社 team ran 220 circuits with 90 shots each, using standard QV optimization techniques to yield an average of 175.2 arbitrary angle two-qubit gates per circuit.

The System Model H1-1 successfully passed the quantum volume 8192 benchmark, outputting heavy outcomes 69.33% of the time, with a 95% confidence interval lower bound of 68.38% which is above the 2/3 threshold.

About 黑料社

黑料社,聽the world鈥檚 largest integrated quantum company, pioneers powerful quantum computers and advanced software solutions. 黑料社鈥檚 technology drives breakthroughs in materials discovery, cybersecurity, and next-gen quantum AI. With over 500 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, 黑料社 leads the quantum computing revolution across continents.听

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November 5, 2025
Introducing Helios: The Most Accurate Quantum Computer in the World
A large room with a large rectangular objectAI-generated content may be incorrect.
Figure 1: A rendering of the 黑料社 Helios system deployed at a customer site.听

We鈥檙e pleased to introduce Helios, a technological marvel redefining the possible.听

Building on its predecessor H2, which has already breached quantum advantage, Helios nearly doubles the qubit count and surpasses H2鈥檚 industry-leading fidelity, pushing further into the quantum advantage regime than any system before it. With unprecedented capability across its full stack, Helios is the most powerful quantum computer in the world.听

鈥淗elios is a true marvel鈥攁 seamless fusion of hardware and software, creating a platform for discovery unlike any other.鈥

Dr. Rajeeb Hazra, CEO聽

Helios鈥 groundbreaking design and advanced software stack bring quantum programming closer than ever to the ease and flexibility of classical computing鈥攑ositioning Helios to accelerate commercial adoption. Even before its public debut, Helios had already demonstrated its capabilities as the world鈥檚 first enterprise-grade quantum computer. During a two-month early access program, select partners including SoftBank Corp. and JPMorgan Chase conducted commercially relevant research. We also leveraged Helios to perform large-scale simulations in high-temperature superconductivity and quantum magnetism鈥攂oth with clear pathways to real-world industry applications.

Helios is now available to all customers through our cloud service and on-premise offering, including an option to integrate with NVIDIA GB200 for applications targeting specific end markets.听聽聽聽聽

A Stellar Quantum Computer聽
鈥淵ou would need to harvest every star in the universe to power a classical machine that could do the same calculations we did with Helios."

Dr. Anthony Ransford, Helios Lead Architect
Figure 2: Random Circuit Sampling (RCS) results on Helios. Running the same calculation classically in the same amount of time would require the power of all the stars in the visible universe.

As we detailed in a , Helios sets a new standard for quantum computing performance with the highest fidelity ever released to the market. It features 98 fully connected physical qubits with single-qubit gate fidelity of 99.9975% and two-qubit gate fidelity of 99.921% across all qubit pairs鈥making it the most accurate commercial quantum computer in the world.听聽

Our fidelity shines in system-level benchmarks, such as Random Circuit Sampling (RCS), famously used by Google to demonstrate quantum supremacy when it performed an RCS task that would take a classical computer 鈥10 septillion years鈥 to replicate. Now, RCS serves as both a benchmark and the minimum standard for serious competitors in the market. Frequently missed in this conversation, however, is the importance of fidelity, or accuracy. That's why, when benchmarking Helios using RCS, we report the fidelity achieved by Helios on circuits of varying complexity (with complexity quantified by power requirements for classical simulation).

Our results show a classical supercomputer would require more power than the Sun鈥攐r, in fact, the combined power of all stars in the visible universe鈥攖o complete the same task in the same amount of time. In contrast, Helios achieved it using roughly the power of a single data center rack.听

Like its predecessors, H1 and H2, Helios is designed to improve fidelity and overall system performance over time while sustaining competitive leadership through the launch of its successor.

Qubits at a Crossroads
Figure 3: The Helios chip, which generates tiny electromagnetic fields to trap single atomic ions hovering above the chip, which are then used for computation. The Helios chip contains the world鈥檚 first commercial ion junction 鈥 enabling a huge jump in architectural design and opening the door to true scaling.
"When I first saw the rotatable ion storage ring with a junction and gating legs sketched on a napkin, I loved the idea for its simplicity and efficiency. Seeing it finally realized after all of the team鈥檚 hard work has been truly incredible."聽

Dr. John Gaebler, Fellow and Chief Scientist, 黑料社

The Helios ion trap uses tiny currents to generate electromagnetic fields that hold single atomic ions (qubits) hovering above the trap for computation. We introduced a first-of-its-kind 鈥渏unction鈥, which acts like a traffic intersection for qubits, enabling efficient routing and improved reliability. This is not only the first commercial implementation of this engineering triumph but it also allows our QCCD (Quantum Charged Coupled Device) architecture to scale, with future systems featuring hundreds of junctions arranged like a city street grid.听聽聽

Illustration:The Helios QPU. Ions rotate through the ring storage to the cache and logic zones for gating. .

Whereas predecessor systems routed qubits using 鈥減hysical swaps,鈥 requiring sequential sorting, cooling, and gating that prevented parallel operations, the Helios QPU instead resembles a classical architecture with dedicated memory, cache, and computational zones. Like a spinning hard drive, the Helios QPU rotates qubits through ring storage (memory), passes them through the junction into the cache, moves them to logic zones for gating, and moves them to the leg storage while the next batch is processed. Sorting can now be done in parallel with cooling operations, resulting in a processor that is faster and less error prone.听 This parallelism will become a hallmark of 黑料社鈥檚 future generations, enabling faster operating speeds.

Animation: This triumph of engineering demonstrates exquisite control over some of nature鈥檚 smallest particles in a way the world has never seen; one colleague likened the ions to a 鈥渓ittle marching band.鈥

黑料社鈥檚 QCCD provides full all-to-all connectivity, giving the Helios QPU significant advantages over 鈥渇ixed qubit鈥 architectures, such as those used in superconducting systems. Its ability to physically move qubits around and entangle any qubit with any other qubit enables algorithms and error-correcting codes that are functionally impossible for fixed qubit architectures.听

A blue dot pattern on a black backgroundAI-generated content may be incorrect.
Image: Real image of 98 single Barium atoms (atomic ions) used for computation inside 黑料社鈥檚 Helios quantum computer.

We made another 鈥渢iny鈥 but significant change: we switched our qubits from ytterbium to barium. Whereas ytterbium largely relied on ultraviolet lasers that are expensive and hard on other components, barium can be manipulated with lasers in the visible part of the spectrum, where mature industrial technology exists, providing a more affordable, reliable and scalable commercial solution.

Barium also naturally allows the quantum computer to detect and remove a certain type of error, known as , at the atomic level. By addressing this error directly, programmers can enhance the performance of their computation.

Delivered on Time 鈥 in Real Time

As announced earlier this year, Helios launched with a completely new stack equipped with a new software environment that makes quantum programming feel as intuitive as classical development.听

Our new stack also features a real-time engine that massively improves our capability. With a , we are evolving from static, pre-planned circuits to dynamic quantum programs that respond to results on the fly. We can now, for the first time on a quantum computer, interleave GPU-accelerated classical and quantum computations in a single program.听

Our real-time engine also means we have dynamic transport 鈥 routing qubits as the moment demands reduces time to solution and diminishes the impact of memory errors.听聽

Programmers can now use our new quantum programming language, Guppy, to write dynamic circuits that were previously impossible. By combining Guppy with our real-time engine, developers can leverage arbitrary control flow driven by quantum measurements, as well as full classical computation鈥攊ncluding loops, higher-order functions, early exits, and dynamic qubit allocation. Far from being mere conveniences, these capabilities are essential stepping stones toward achieving fault-tolerant quantum computing at scale鈥攑utting us decisively ahead of the competition.

Fully compatible with industry standards like QIR and tools such as NVIDIA CUDA-Q, Helios bridges classical and quantum computing more seamlessly than ever, making hybrid quantum-classical development simple, natural, and accessible, and establishing Helios as the most programmable, general-purpose quantum computer ever built.听聽

The Most Logical Path to Fault Tolerance

While everyone else is promising fault-tolerance, we鈥檙e delivering it. We are the only company to demonstrate a fully universal fault-tolerant gate set, we鈥檝e demonstrated more codes than anyone else, and .

Now, with 98 physical qubits, we鈥檝e been able to make 94 logical qubits, fully entangled in one of the largest GHZ states ever recorded. We did this with better than break-even fidelity, meaning they outperform physical qubits running the same algorithm. Built on our Iceberg code, published last year in , these logical qubits achieve the industry鈥檚 highest encoding efficiency, needing only two ancilla qubits per code block, or roughly a 1:1 physical-to-logical qubit ratio.

With 50 error-detected logical qubits, Helios achieved better than break-even performance, running the largest encoded simulation of quantum magnetism to date鈥攁n exceptional example of how users can leverage efficient encodings. This range and flexibility let users tailor the encoding rate to their application: fewer logical qubits deliver higher fidelity for less complex tasks, while larger sets enable more complex simulations.

Helios also produced 48 fully error-corrected logical qubits at a remarkable 2:1 encoding rate, a ratio thought impossible just a few years ago. This super high encoding rate stands in stark contrast to other from industry peers. For example, the demonstration linked in the previous sentence would need a whopping 4800 qubits to make 48 logical qubits. Our 2:1 encoding rate was achieved through a clever technique called code concatenation, a breakthrough that supports single-shot error correction, transversal logic, and full parallelization鈥攁ll at 99.99% state preparation and measurement fidelity.听

To extend this performance at scale, all future 黑料社 systems鈥攕tarting with Helios鈥攚ill integrate , treating decoding as a dynamic computational process rather than a static lookup. Errors can be corrected as computations run without slowing the logical clock rate. Combined with Guppy, NVIDIA CUDA-Q, and NVQLink, this infrastructure forms the foundation for fault-tolerant, real-time quantum computation, delivering immediate quantum advantage in the near term and a clear path to scalable error-corrected computing.听

We remain the only company to perform a fully universal fault-tolerant gate set, with more error-correcting codes and than any other company.

Helios is ready to drive practical, commercial quantum applications across industries. Its unprecedented fidelity, scalability, and programmability give users the tools to tackle problems that were previously out of reach. This is just the beginning, and we look forward to seeing what users and companies will achieve with it.听

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November 5, 2025
Helios Delivers Quantum Advantage with Real-World Impact

黑料社鈥檚 real world experiment, on the world鈥檚 most powerful quantum computer, is the largest of its kind鈥 so large that no amount of classical computing could match it

Figure 1. Real image (not an artist鈥檚 depiction) of 98 single atoms (atomic ions) used for computation inside 黑料社鈥檚 Helios quantum computer. The atomic ions are cooled to a fraction of a degree above absolute zero, so that their quantum state can be carefully controlled and manipulated to perform calculations that are very difficult, if not impossible, for classical supercomputers.听

In 1911, a student working under famed physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes made a discovery that would rewire our understanding of electricity. The student was studying the electrical resistance of wires, a seemingly simple question that held secrets destined to surprise the world.听

Kamerlingh Onnes had recently succeeded in liquefying helium, a feat so impressive it earned him the Nobel Prize in Physics two years later. With this breakthrough, scientists could now immerse other materials in a cold bath of liquid Helium, cooling things to unprecedented temperatures and observing their behavior.

Many theories existed about what would happen to a wire at such low temperatures. Lord Kelvin predicted that electrons would freeze in place, making the resistance infinite and stopping the conduction of electricity. Others expected resistance to decrease linearly with temperature鈥攁 hypothesis that led to thermometer designs still in use today.

When the student cooled a mercury wire to 3.6 degrees above absolute zero, he found something remarkable: the electrical resistivity suddenly vanished.

Onnes quickly devised an ingenious experiment: as a diligent researcher, he knew that he needed to validate these surprising findings. He took a closed loop of wire, set a current running through it, and watched as it flowed endlessly without fading鈥攁 type of perpetual motion that seemed to defy everything we know about physics. And so, superconductivity was born.听

More than a century later, all known superconductors still require extreme conditions like brutal cold or high pressure. If we could instead design a material that superconducts at room temperature, and under normal conditions, our world would be profoundly reshaped.听 鈥淩oom temperature superconductivity鈥, as it is generally called, would enable a raft of technological breakthroughs from affordable MRI machines to nearly lossless power grids.

Designing such a material means answering many open questions, and scientists are pursuing diverse strategies to find answers. One promising approach is light-induced superconductivity. In one astonishing study, researchers at the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg used light to entice a material that normally superconducts at roughly -180 掳C - but only for a few picoseconds. This effect raised new questions: how does light achieve something that scientists have been grappling with for decades? What is the microscopic mechanism behind this phenomenon? Could understanding it unlock practical room-temperature superconductors?

Nature鈥檚 language is mathematics and mathematics is the language of the world鈥檚 most powerful quantum computer, Helios

Physics is a surprisingly profound field when you stop to think about it. At its core lies the idea that nature speaks the language of mathematics鈥攁nd that by discovering the right equations, we can reveal her secrets. As bold as that sounds, history has proven it true time and again. Whenever we peek behind the veil; mathematics is there.

To understand a phenomena like superconductivity, physicists first need a mathematical model, or a set of equations that describe how it works. With the right model, they can predict and even design new superconductors that operate under more practical conditions. This is a key frontier in the search for room temperature superconductors, one of science鈥檚 holy grails.

Since the discovery of superconductivity, a lot of work has gone into finding this right model 鈥 one that can act as a sort of 鈥楻osetta stone鈥 for harnessing this phenomenon. One of the best bets for describing high temperature superconductors like the one in the Hamburg study is called the 鈥渘on-equilibrium Fermi-Hubbard鈥 model, which describes how electrons interact and move in a crystal.听

A surprising element of models that describe superconductivity is the prediction that electrons 鈥榩air up鈥 when the material becomes superconducting, dancing around in a waltz, two at a time. These pairs are referred to as 鈥渃ooper pairs鈥 after the famous physicist Leon Cooper. Now, scientists studying superconductors look for 鈥減airing correlations鈥, a key signature of superconductivity.

Even armed with the Fermi-Hubbard model, light-induced superconductivity has been very difficult to study. The world鈥檚 most powerful supercomputers can only handle very small versions, limiting their utility. Even quantum platforms, like analog simulators, limit researchers to observing 鈥榓verage鈥 quantities and obscuring the microscopic details that are crucial for unravelling this mystery.

Light-induced superconductivity has proved challenging to study with quantum computers as well, as doing so requires low error rates, many qubits, and extreme flexibility to measure the fickle symptoms of superconductivity.

That was, until now: 黑料社鈥檚 Helios is one of the first machines in the world able to handle the complexity of the non-equilibrium Fermi-Hibbard model at scales previously out of reach.听

Hopping across the lattice and connecting the dots

Before Helios, we were limited to small explorations of this model, stalling research on this critical frontier. Now, with Helios, we have a quantum computer uniquely suited for this problem. With a novel and using up to 90 qubits (72 system qubits plus 18 ancilla), Helios can simulate the dynamics of a 6脳6 lattice 鈥 a system so large that its full quantum state spans over 2^72 dimensions.

Figure 2. The Helios chip, which generates tiny electromagnetic fields to trap single atomic ions hovering above the chip to be used for computation.

Using Helios to study a system like this offers researchers a sort of 鈥渜ubit-based laboratory.鈥 Capable of handling complex quantum mechanical effects better than classical computers, Helios allows researchers to thoroughly explore phenomena like this without wasting expensive laboratory time and materials, or spending lots of money and energy running it on a supercomputer.听

Our qubit-based laboratory is a dream come true for several reasons. First, it allows arbitrary state preparation 鈥 preparing states far from equilibrium, a challenging task for classical computers. Second, it allows for meaningfully long 鈥榙ynamical simulation鈥 鈥 seeing how the state evolves in time as entanglement spreads and complexity increases. This is notoriously difficult for classical computers, in part due to their difficulty with handling distinctly quantum phenomena like entanglement. Finally, it allows for flexible measurements and experimental parameters 鈥 you can measure any observable, including critical 鈥渙ff-diagonal鈥 observables that carry the signature of superconductivity, and simulate any system, such as those with laser pulses or electric fields.听

This last point is the most significant. While analog quantum simulators, like cold atom systems, can take snapshots of atom positions or measure densities, they struggle with off-diagonal observables鈥攖he very ones that signal the formation of Cooper pairs in superconductors.

Breaking new ground: a light-induced pairing

In our work, we've simulated three different regimes of the Fermi-Hubbard model and successfully measured non-zero superconducting pairing correlations 鈥 a first for any quantum computing platform.

We began by preparing a low-energy state of the model at half-filling 鈥 a standard benchmark for testing quantum simulations. Then, using simulated laser pulses or electric fields, we perturbed the system and observed how it responded.

After these perturbations, we measured a notable increase in the so-called 鈥渆ta鈥 pairing correlations, a mathematical signature of superconducting behavior. These results prove that our computers can help us understand light-induced superconductivity, such as the results from the Max Planck researchers. However, unlike those physical experiments, Helios offers a new level of control and insight. By tuning every aspect of the simulation 鈥 from pulse shape, to field strength, to lattice geometry 鈥 researchers can explore scenarios that are completely inaccessible to real materials or analog simulators.

Looking to a future where superconductors permeate our lives

Why does any of this matter? If we could predict which materials will become superconducting 鈥 and at what temperature, field, or current 鈥 it would transform how we search for new superconductors. Instead of trial-and-error in the lab, scientists could design and test new materials digitally first, saving huge amounts of time and money.

In the long run, Helios and its successors will become essential tools for materials science 鈥 not just confirming theories but generating new ones. And perhaps, one day, they鈥檒l help us crack the code behind room-temperature superconductors.

Until then, the quantum revolution continues, one entangled pair at a time.

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October 30, 2025
Scalable Quantum Error Detection

Typically, Quantum Error Detection (QED) is viewed as a short-term solution鈥攁 non-scalable, stop-gap until full fault tolerance is achieved at scale.

That鈥檚 just changed, thanks to a serendipitous discovery made by our team. Now, QED can be used in a much wider context than previously thought. Our team made this discovery while studying the contact process, which describes things like how diseases spread or how water permeates porous materials. In particular, our team was studying the quantum contact process (QCP), a problem they had tackled before, which helps physicists understand things like phase transitions. In the process (pun intended), they came across what senior advanced physicist, Eli Chertkov, described as 鈥渁 surprising result.鈥

While examining the problem, the team realized that they could convert detected errors due to noisy hardware into random resets, a key part of the QCP, thus avoiding the exponentially costly overhead of post-selection normally expected in QED.

To understand this better, the team developed a new protocol in which the encoded, or logical, quantum circuit adapts to the noise generated by the quantum computer. They quickly realized that this method could be used to explore other classes of random circuits similar to the ones they were already studying.

The team put it all together on System Model H2 to run a complex simulation, and were surprised to find that they were able to achieve near break-even results, where the logically encoded circuit performed as well as its physical analog, thanks to their clever application of QED. 聽Ultimately, this new protocol will allow QED codes to be used in a scalable way, saving considerable computational resources compared to full quantum error correction (QEC).

Researchers at the crossroads of quantum information, quantum simulation, and many-body physics will take interest in this protocol and use it as a springboard for inventing new use cases for QED.

Stay tuned for more, our team always has new tricks up their sleeves.

Learn mode about System Model H2 with this video:

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