Quantum Computing for Computational Advantage

June 16
34 mins

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Episode Description

What does quantum advantage actually mean? How do you prove a quantum computer can outperform the world’s most powerful supercomputers? And why is its energy efficiency arriving at such an important time for the world?


In this episode of Quantum Matters, host Murray Thom sits down with Dr. Andrew King, Senior Distinguished Scientist at D-Wave, to discuss the company’s landmark peer-reviewed research demonstrating quantum computational advantage on a

problem relevant to materials discovery.


Together, they unpack the result behind the headlines, including a calculation completed in minutes on a quantum processor that could take classical supercomputers nearly a million years. They explore what it took to validate that claim, why energy efficiency is becoming a critical part of the quantum computing story, and how these advances could impact materials science, blockchain, and AI.


Join us for an inside look at one of the most significant milestones in quantum computing and what it could mean for the future of computation.



Learn more about the Beyond Classical research:

https://www.dwavequantum.com/beyond-classical/ 


Explore the Blockchain research: https://www.dwavequantum.com/blockchain/ 




Highlights: 


03:41 — The Most Exciting Quantum Breakthrough in Years


11:49 — Why Quantum Computing Could Revolutionize Energy Efficiency


29:12 — What’s Next for Quantum Computing: New Controls and Capabilities



Show Glossary


  • Quantum Phase Transition: A change in the state of a quantum system driven by quantum effects rather than changes in temperature.
  • Programmable Quantum Magnet: A controllable quantum system designed to mimic the behavior of magnetic materials for experiments and simulations.
  • Constraint Satisfaction Problem (CSP): A problem where a solution must satisfy a specified set of constraints or rules.
  • Spin Glass: A disordered magnetic system with competing interactions that make finding its lowest-energy state difficult.
  • Polynomial Speedup: An improvement where a quantum algorithm scales more favorably than a classical algorithm as problem size increases.
  • Matrix Product State (MPS): A mathematical representation used to efficiently simulate certain quantum systems on classical computers.
  • Projected Entangled Pair States (PEPS): An advanced tensor-network method used to model higher-dimensional quantum systems.
  • Thermal Bath: The surrounding environment that exchanges heat with a physical system and can influence its behavior.
  • Topological Phase Transition: A phase transition characterized by changes in a system’s global structure rather than conventional ordering.
  • Order by Disorder: A phenomenon where fluctuations create an ordered state from a set of equally possible disordered configurations.
  • Degenerate Ground States: Multiple lowest-energy states of a system that all have exactly the same energy.
  • Hamiltonian: The mathematical description of the total energy and evolution of a physical system.
  • Non-Ising Hamiltonian: A Hamiltonian that includes interactions beyond those found in the standard Ising model of magnetism.
  • Multicolor Annealing: A quantum annealing technique that applies different control schedules to different groups of qubits.
  • State Preparation: The process of initializing a quantum system into a desired starting state before computation or simulation.
  • Doping Parameter: A variable describing how impurities are intentionally added to a material to alter its properties.
  • Hopfield Network: A type of recurrent neural network that stores and retrieves patterns using an energy-based framework.
  • Tensor Network: A mathematical framework used to represent and compute properties of complex quantum systems.



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