By using controlled microwave noise, researchers created a quantum refrigerator capable of operating as a cooler, heat engine, or amplifier. This approach offers a new way to manage heat directly ...
Using hot water to cool supercomputers? Nvidia and others are doing it. It’s liquid cooling minus the water chillers.
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Individual electrons trapped and controlled above 1 K, easing cooling limits for quantum computing
Researchers from EeroQ, the quantum computing company pioneering electron-on-helium technology, have published a paper, titled "Sensing and Control of Single Trapped Electrons Above 1 Kelvin," in ...
Quantum computers need special materials called topological superconductors—but they’ve been notoriously difficult to create.
Former IBM expert discusses cooling systems, environmental stability hurdles and workforce needs for practical quantum deployment ...
Researchers developed a photonic chip that incorporates precisely designed antennas to manipulate beams of tightly focused, intersecting light, which can rapidly cool a quantum computing system to ...
New evidence suggests a rare triplet superconductor may help quantum computers stay in sync by preserving electron spin ...
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