House reps hope to jumpstart qubit race with R&D
As such the leaders of the panel – chairman Frank Lucas and ranking member Zoe Lofgren – have introduced a law bill to spend its way out of the problem. Various technologists believe quantum computing has the potential to accelerate a variety of complex workloads – ranging from the simulation of chemicals to advanced networking, route optimization, and advanced logistics.
Some fear the technology could eventually render modern encryption useless – though the jury is"Quantum technologies are actively changing our landscape, and we must ensure we are at the forefront, breaking down quantum barriers while leading with our democratic values," committee chairman Lucas declared in a, Russian and Chinese researchers are actively developing quantum computing test beds for research and development. Earlier this year, a Chinese group claimed to have brought a 176 qubit quantum computer online. The Russians' latest system is a fair bit smaller – at 16 qubits – though scientists claim to have used the system to model simple molecules. According to lawmakers, while the US has maintained its lead in the theoretical physics underpinning quantum systems, rivals like China have managed to take the lead in quantum communications and are closing the gap in other areas. The committee contends that unless steps are taken to fuel US development of quantum systems, the Land of the FreeIt calls for the US government to take a number of specific steps to accelerate US development in quantum systems. Some are rather straightforward – like working with allies to develop more advanced quantum systems, establishing a pipeline of skilled workers, roping NASA into quantum research efforts, and promoting commercialization of these technologies. Other initiatives would see the creation of research and development centers under the National Institute for Standards and Technology , the creation of new quantum testbeds, and supply chains under agencies like the Department of Energy . The latter makes sense as quantum computers are increasingly being paired with conventional supercomputers – of which the DoE operates some of the most powerful in the world., the bill calls for more than $3 billion between 2024 and 2028. A sizable chunk of that cash would be pulled from the $280 billion CHIPS and Science Act signed into law last year.Intel to build restricted facilities to make chips for US military To be clear, it's not like the US has been standing still on quantum development. Last month the Biden administrationthe Underexplored Systems for Utility-Scale Quantum Computing program. The initiative, launched in collaboration with Microsoft, Atom, and PsiQuantum, wants to further the development of utility-scale quantum system designs. Meanwhile, in the private sector we've seen a flurry of interest around quantum computing over the past few months. In May, IBM announced itsLast month Atom Computing touted the creation of a 1,180 qubit system. That may sound small compared to Big Blue's ambitions, but – as Gartner analyst Matthew Brisse recently toldequal. Factors like decoherence and the quality of the qubits themselves are often more significant in determining the power of a quantum system. ®US, Australia solicit Google's help with Pacific subsea cable projectBiden admin reveals 31 R&D tech hubs, with $500m up for grabsWe're not in e-Kansas anymore: State courts reel from 'unauthorized incursion'
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