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Revisiting the Poor Man’s Majoranas: the spin–exchange induced spillover effect

This just in: using “Poor man’s Majoranas” as quantum spin probes could open a new frontier for #

Quantumscience! By harnessing the sensitivity of these systems, scientists have taken what was once considered a defect into a promising feature that enables them to function as precise quantum spin sensors ⚛️. Explore what this means for the future of quantumphysics here.


Revisiting the Poor Man’s Majoranas: the spin–exchange induced spillover effect, Sanches, J E, Sobreira, T M, Ricco, L S, Figueira, M S, Seridonio, A C.

Automated AI system flags qubit drift and instability, speeding quantum calibration

NPL, the UK’s National Metrology Institute (NMI), plays a central role in providing accurate and trusted measurement across emerging technology. Within its Institute for Quantum Standards and Technology (IQST), the team is developing methods to characterize and calibrate quantum devices, particularly quantum computing.

As part of a new collaboration, NPL is integrating NVIDIA’s Ising AI tools into its quantum measurement systems to automate key calibration tasks. This approach will help address one of the major challenges facing quantum computing: the need to manage large numbers of qubits, each affected by multiple sources of noise and instability.

Qubit performance is commonly assessed using metrics such as the qubit relaxation time, usually referred to as T1 time, which is a metric for the timescale at which a qubit decays from its excited state to the ground state. These values can fluctuate or drift due to interactions with the environment, requiring frequent checks to ensure reliable operation. Traditionally, such checks are carried out manually by experts.

Laser method unlocks 3,000-Kelvin thin-film synthesis for quantum materials

Thin films might not come up in conversation every day, but they are all around us. Take the metallic plastic films of chip bags, for example, or the anti-reflective coatings on eyeglasses. Even the coatings on pills that make them easier to swallow are thin films. Depositing extremely thin layers of materials in a consistent and uniform way is also crucial to the production of semiconductors, which are the foundation of modern electronics.

Not all materials can be easily deposited in such thin layers, such as materials with very high melting points. Now, Caltech researchers led by Austin Minnich, professor of mechanical engineering and applied physics, and deputy chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science, have demonstrated a laser-based method for generating thin films of materials, such as niobium. The work could directly impact superconducting electronics used in quantum computers.

The team recently described the work in a paper published in the journal Applied Physics Letters.

Quantum bottleneck breaks wide open as one light beam carries 23 secure channels at the same time

A new Bar-Ilan University study points to a major advance in quantum information processing, demonstrating a way to send, manipulate, and measure quantum information across many frequency channels simultaneously, rather than one at a time. The study was recently published in the journal Science Advances.

The approach could allow quantum communication technologies, including secure key distribution and quantum teleportation, to operate far more efficiently by taking advantage of the enormous bandwidth already available in quantum light sources.

Today, one of the main limits in quantum information processing is not the light source itself, but the measurement technology. Quantum light sources can operate across an extremely broad optical spectrum, but standard detectors can measure only a tiny fraction of that bandwidth. As a result, much of the available capacity goes unused.

Confirming altermagnetism in an abundant mineral

Also known as magnetoelectronics, spintronics rely on electron spin rather than electron charge, as found in traditional electronics. Although spintronics is still an emerging field, spintronic technologies are already found in hard disk drives and giant magnetoresistance sensors used in industrial and automotive applications. Once the right foundational materials are discovered and verified, including economical materials for altermagnets, spintronics could advance technologies from wireless communication to quantum computing.

Researchers using neutrons at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) discovered that hematite, essentially rust, can help design energy-efficient spintronics.

The team’s findings, published in Physical Review Letters, confirmed a key signature of altermagnetism (a new type of magnetism discovered in 2022) in hematite. Altermagnets are magnetic materials in which electron spins align in opposite directions, allowing pure spin currents to flow without a net electric charge—ideal conditions for spintronics. The team measured spin waves, which move through a material’s magnetic order similar to how sound waves move through air. They discovered that these waves show a clear separation in energy, a unique signature that confirms the material’s altermagnetic nature.

Quantum Fourier transform reaches 52 qubits, shattering the previous 27-qubit record

The spin-off company ParityQC has implemented the largest quantum Fourier transform ever reported using an IBM quantum computer, thereby setting a new milestone on the path toward the industrial application of quantum computers. The quantum Fourier transform is a cornerstone algorithm with applications in cryptography, financial modeling, and materials science.

Innsbruck-based quantum architecture company ParityQC performed a quantum Fourier transform using 52 superconducting qubits on an IBM Heron quantum processor. This surpasses the previous record of 27 qubits, which was set two years ago using an ion-trap quantum computer. The results were published this week on the arXiv preprint server.

“This milestone was only possible through the synergy of IBM’s latest quantum hardware and the ParityQC Architecture, which unlocked an exponential improvement in efficiency,” say Wolfgang Lechner and Magdalena Hauser, Co-CEOs of ParityQC. “What we are witnessing is European quantum innovation taking a global lead in translating theoretical potential into real-world performance.”

The Gravity Particle Should Exist. So Where Is It?

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Physics is this close to understanding the entire universe. And what lives in this gap? Many physicists think it’s the elusive graviton—the quantum particle of gravity—whose discovery will finally allow us to stitch together our two great theories of nature into a single master theory. But what is the graviton, and does it even exist?

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