Atom Computing is now using the system internally and plans to open it up for public use next year. The system has moved from a 10×10 grid to a 35×35 grid, bringing the potential sites for atoms up to 1,225. So far, testing has taken place with up to 1,180 atoms present, making it the largest machine that anyone has publicly acknowledged (at least in terms of qubit count). The qubits are housed in a 12×5 foot box that contains the lasers and optics, along with the vacuum system and a bit of unused space — Atom CEO Rob Hayes quipped that “there’s a lot of air inside that box.” It does not, however, contain the computer hardware that controls the system and its operations. The grid of atoms it’s used to create, by contrast, is only about 100 microns per side, so it won’t strain the hardware to keep increasing the qubit count.
Categories: Leben (Life aka misc)Technology