Quantum Zeitgeist Weekly Digest
Welcome to this week’s quantum technology digest. The past seven days brought substantial activity across several areas of quantum development, from hardware advancements to software integration and security solutions. This digest covers progress in error correction, computer construction, and access to quantum resources. Several companies are pushing the boundaries of fault-tolerant computing. Quantinuum reported a major fidelity boost with logical qubits, while Atom Computing secured significant funding to accelerate its approach. PsiQuantum and QuEra Computing announced concrete steps toward building and deploying utility-scale, fault-tolerant systems, with the latter targeting a 2028 launch on AWS. Beyond hardware, IBM focused on improving quantum circuit design with language models and simplifying the transition to post-quantum cryptography. IonQ advanced both quantum key distribution for existing networks and high-fidelity entanglement, and RIKEN activated a hybrid quantum-HPC supercomputer. HPE also signaled a commitment to broader quantum access through industry collaborations. 1. Quantinuum Achieves 800x Fidelity Boost with Logical Qubits on Commercial System Quantinuum demonstrated logical qubits with 800 times the fidelity of their physical counterparts, a result published in Nature. The company achieved this error correction improvement using its System Model H2 hardware, in collaboration with Microsoft. This advancement includes efficient qubit encoding, generating 48 logical qubits from 98 physical qubits, and marks progress toward practical, fault-tolerant quantum computing capable of handling real-world problems. Quantinuum also successfully teleported a logical qubit with high fidelity, as detailed in a Science publication. Read more 2. PsiQuantum Starts Building First Utility-Scale Quantum Computer in Australia PsiQuantum has begun construction on a facility in Moreton Bay Central, Australia, to house what it intends to be the world’s first utility