JUPITER supercomputer breaks world record with 50-qubit quantum simulation
Scientists in Germany have pulled off a staggering computing feat by fully simulating a 50-qubit quantum computer for the first time ever using Europe’s new exascale supercomputer, JUPITER. The breakthrough shatters the previous 48-qubit record and highlights just how powerful next-generation supercomputers have become.
What happened
Scientists in Germany have pulled off a staggering computing feat by fully simulating a 50-qubit quantum computer for the first time ever using Europe’s new exascale supercomputer, JUPITER. The breakthrough shatters the previous 48-qubit record and highlights just how powerful next-generation supercomputers have become. The development sits squarely in the the news cycle cycle that our editors have been tracking this week, touching on breakthrough, first, scientists.
Why this matters
This story sits at the intersection of several themes our editors have been tracking. We'll be watching to see how it ripples through the rest of the week.
The bigger picture
This release fits into a broader pattern our team has been tracking across the daily news cycle.
What to watch
We'll update if the story develops materially in the coming hours.
Originally reported by Sciencedaily. Read the original report for full context.