Essayer OR - Gratuit
The race to realise quantum computing dream
Hindustan Times Gurugram
|December 04, 2025
Wiping our shoes, we enter a sparkling glass-walled room with vibration-absorbent floors and separate dedicated earthing.
A cylinder hangs in the middle with gold-plated copper layers sitting inside a dilution refrigerator. Wires, cables, monitors and pipes emerge in and out of the cylinder like an organised Hydra. Some pipes go into two other rooms ~ one houses the compressed helium, the other one the invertor. The cables go into racks that further feed into computers. A loud cling-cling sound of the pulse tube overwhelms the glassed-in room, making talking difficult.
All of this infrastructure, as well as the 150 people team of startup QPiAI revolve around one 6cem-sized, 64-qubit quantum processing chip that this cylinder houses. It's the heart of India’s first full-stack quantum computer, Indus, which at 25-qubit processing power, is the most powerful in the country. Wrapped around this cylinder are all our hopes to be part of the quantum race.
New beginning
A quantum computer is dramatically different from the computers we have — our laptops, desktops and smartphones. Unlike classical computers that use mechanics and electric switches to process information, quantum computers use quantum mechanics and the physics of very small subatomic particles to perform calculations at a much faster scale. Last month, Google, one of the pioneers in quantum computers, released research that proved that a quantum processor is 13,000 times faster than even the fastest classical supercomputer. Google's Willow, released last year, performed a computation in under five minutes that would take the fastest supercomputers we have today, 10 septillion years to solve. No wonder everyone wants to develop this technology. The US, China and the EU have put in $1 billion each to develop indigenous versions. India’s National Quantum Mission is pushing to develop this ecosystem in academia and in startups.
Protecting the chip
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 04, 2025 de Hindustan Times Gurugram.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Hindustan Times Gurugram
Hindustan Times Gurugram
After HT report, water drained, leak plugged at RTR underpass
Water pipeline leakages that were flooding of RTR underpass in south Delhi have been plugged, with most of the water being drained out, and the Public Works Department's (PWD's) field teams were busy cleaning the tunnel shafts on Wednesday.
1 mins
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
'Detect, delete, deport': Shah defends SIR in LS
The Opposition’s main agenda is to keep undocumented migrants in the voter list but the government will fulfil its constitutional duty to “detect, delete and deport” them, Union home minister Amit Shah said on Wednesday, adding that the Congress lost elections not because of vote theft but poor leadership.
1 min
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
Jairam: Govt is ignoring debate among stalwarts to push select narratives
Congress MP Jairam Ramesh on Wednesday accused the government of “weaponising nationalism” while ignoring the actual historical debates that shaped the national song, Vande Mataram.
1 mins
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
First Indian girl to open Chanel show shares her story
Bhavitha Mandava, who became the first Indian girl to open a Chanel show for designer Matthieu Blazy, became an overnight sensation with everyone on the Internet wondering who she is.
1 min
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
SC slams SIT, orders probe into Noida officials’ assets
{ LAND COMPENSATION CASE } GIVES 2 MONTHS TO FINISH PROBE
2 mins
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
CAQM asks SC to roll back relief given in Aug to ELVs
CAQM flags rising risk from old vehicles
2 mins
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
'Humans were making fire 400,000 yrs ago, far earlier than once thought'
Scientists in Britain say ancient humans may have learned to make fire far earlier than previously believed, after uncovering evidence that deliberate fire-setting took place in what is now eastern England around 400,000 years ago.
1 min
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
BOMB HOAX AT AJMER DARGAH, COLLECTORATE; THIRD FOR RAJ HC
The Ajmer Dargah, Ajmer collectorate, and the Rajasthan high court (Jaipur Bench) received another hoax bomb threat on Wednesday, officials said.
1 min
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
Cabinet may clear India-Oman FTA this week
NEGOTIATIONS BETWEEN INDIA AND THE SULTANATE OF OMAN WERE ALMOST OVER IN ARLY 2024, BUT THE DEAL COULD NOT BE SIGNED
1 mins
December 11, 2025
Hindustan Times Gurugram
More CCTVs, increased police presence dot Red Fort vicinity
A month on since a blast in a car near the Red Fort left at least 12 people dead, security deployment in the area has heightened as the crowds have returned to one of Capital's most iconic spots.
1 min
December 11, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
