SPINQ Triangulum Ⅱ is a cost-effective, maintenance-free, and highly stable 3-qubit desktop NMR quantum computer for quantum computing education, demonstrations, and research. It supports any 3-qubit quantum algorithm, open hardware-level pulse sequence editing, and features classical-quantum hybrid programming.
Caltech physicists have created the largest qubit array ever assembled: 6,100 neutral-atom qubits trapped in a grid by lasers. This milestone demonstrates a pathway to large error-corrected quantum computers, maintaining qubit superposition for about 13 seconds with 99.98% manipulation accuracy.
Daniel Kleppner, a renowned physicist who made significant contributions to atomic physics and quantum computing, passed away on June 16, 2025, at the age of 92. He was best known for his work on hydrogen masers, which laid the groundwork for the Global Positioning System (GPS), and his pioneering research on Rydberg atoms and Bose-Einstein condensation. Kleppner spent nearly four decades as a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and received the National Medal of Science in 2006. His final words were a toast to the future of science at his grandson's high school graduation party.
Qiskit is the world’s most popular software stack for quantum computing. Build circuits, leverage Qiskit functions, transpile with AI tools, and execute workloads in an optimized runtime environment.
Researchers have observed electrons forming quasiparticles with fractional amounts of charge without the influence of a magnetic field for the first time. While theorists are still trying to understand the underlying mechanism, the discovery could lead to new developments in quantum computing.