Close Menu
    Trending
    • True-or-false for Round 1 of 2026 NFL Draft: Will Cowboys regret their trade?
    • Opinion | Stewart Brand, Silicon Valley’s Favorite Prophet, on Life’s Most Important Principle
    • Struggling to scale your company? Here are five things that could be holding you back
    • What happens if you’re hit by a primordial black hole?
    • When is London Marathon 2026? Start time and how to watch race for FREE
    • Pentagon Requests $54 Billion For AI War
    • Clavicular Hit With New YouTube Crackdown
    • Beijing’s new supply chain rules deepen concerns for US firms in China
    Benjamin Franklin Institute
    Friday, April 24
    • Home
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Science
    • Technology
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • International
    Benjamin Franklin Institute
    Home»Science»Qubits break quantum limit to encode information for longer
    Science

    Qubits break quantum limit to encode information for longer

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteDecember 12, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link


    Quantum particles can now be made to carry useful information for longer

    koto_feja/Getty Images

    The odd phenomenon of quantum superposition has helped researchers break a fundamental quantum mechanical limit – and given quantum objects properties that make them useful for quantum computing for longer periods of time.

    For a century, physicists have been puzzled by exactly where the line between the quantum world of the small and the macroscopic world that we experience should be drawn. In 1985, physicists Anthony Leggett and Anupam Garg devised a mathematical test that could be applied to objects and their behaviour over time to diagnose whether they are big enough to have escaped quantumness. Here, quantum objects are identified by the unusually strong correlations between their properties at different points in time, akin to their behaviour yesterday and tomorrow being unexpectedly related.

    Objects that score high enough on this test are deemed to be quantum, but those scores were thought to be limited by a number called the temporal Tsirelson’s bound (TTB). Even definitively quantum objects, theorists thought, couldn’t break this bound. But now, Arijit Chatterjee at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research in Pune and his colleagues have devised a way to dramatically break the TTB with one of the simplest quantum objects.

    They focused on qubits, which are the most basic building blocks of quantum computers and other quantum information processing devices. Qubits can be made in many ways, but the researchers used a carbon-based molecule that contained three qubits. They used the first qubit to control how the second “target” qubit behaved for some amount of time. Then, they used the third qubit to extract the properties of the target.

    A three-qubit system is expected to be limited by the TTB, but Chatterjee and his colleagues found a way for the target qubit to break the bound in an extreme manner. In fact, their method produced one of the biggest violations that seems mathematically plausible. Their secret was making the first qubit control the target qubit with a quantum superposition state. Here, an object can effectively embody two states, or behaviours, that seem mutually exclusive. For example, the team’s experiment was similar to the first qubit effectively instructing the target qubit to simultaneously rotate clockwise and counterclockwise.

    A qubit normally falls victim to what is known as decoherence as time goes on – meaning its ability to encode quantum information erodes. But when the target qubit had broken the TTB, decoherence came later and it maintained its ability to encode information for five times as long, because its behaviour across time was being controlled by a superposition.

    Chatterjee says that this robustness is desirable and useful in any situation where qubits must be precisely controlled, such as for computation. Team member H. S. Karthik at the University of Gdansk in Poland says that there are procedures in quantum metrology – for extremely precise sensing of electromagnetic fields, for instance – that could be enhanced by this kind of qubit control.

    Le Luo at Sun Yat-Sen University in China says that, in addition to having clear potential for improving quantum computing protocols, the new study also fundamentally expands our understanding of how quantum objects behave over time. This is because dramatically breaking the TTB means that the qubit’s properties are extremely correlated between two different points in time, in a way that simply cannot happen for non-quantum objects.

    The extreme violation of the TTB, then, is a strong testament to just how much quantumness there was in the whole three-qubit system, says Karthik – and an example of how researchers are still pushing the boundaries of the quantum world.

    Topics:

    • quantum computing/
    • quantum physics



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link

    Related Posts

    Science

    What happens if you’re hit by a primordial black hole?

    April 24, 2026
    Science

    How do earthquakes end? A seismic ‘stop sign’ could help predict earthquake risk

    April 24, 2026
    Science

    ‘Kraken’ fossils show enormous, intelligent octopuses were top predators in Cretaceous seas

    April 24, 2026
    Science

    Largest ever octopus was great white shark of invertebrate predators

    April 24, 2026
    Science

    Do you need to worry about Mythos, Anthropic’s computer-hacking AI?

    April 23, 2026
    Science

    How many dachshunds would it take to get to the moon?

    April 23, 2026
    Editors Picks

    How Russia’s War Machine Brutalizes and Exploits Its Own Soldiers

    December 31, 2025

    TikTok algorithm to be retrained on US user data under Trump deal

    September 22, 2025

    F1 races in Bahrain, Saudi ‘cancelled or postponed’: Source

    March 14, 2026

    Israel says antisemitism raging in Netherlands after Jewish school blast

    March 15, 2026

    Why is Friday the 13th considered unlucky? The origins of the superstition

    March 14, 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to Benjamin Franklin Institute, your premier destination for insightful, engaging, and diverse Political News and Opinions.

    The Benjamin Franklin Institute supports free speech, the U.S. Constitution and political candidates and organizations that promote and protect both of these important features of the American Experiment.

    We are passionate about delivering high-quality, accurate, and engaging content that resonates with our readers. Sign up for our text alerts and email newsletter to stay informed.

    Latest Posts

    True-or-false for Round 1 of 2026 NFL Draft: Will Cowboys regret their trade?

    April 24, 2026

    Opinion | Stewart Brand, Silicon Valley’s Favorite Prophet, on Life’s Most Important Principle

    April 24, 2026

    Struggling to scale your company? Here are five things that could be holding you back

    April 24, 2026

    Subscribe for Updates

    Stay informed by signing up for our free news alerts.

    Paid for by the Benjamin Franklin Institute. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate’s committee.
    • Privacy Policy
    • About us
    • Contact us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.