Physics World 02月26日
Experts weigh in on Microsoft’s topological qubit claim
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微软研究人员宣称已制造出首个拓扑量子比特,这是一种潜在的变革性设备,可以使量子计算更能抵抗错误。然而,这一说法颇具争议,因为支持它的证据尚未在同行评审的论文中展示。尽管微软在《自然》杂志上发表了一篇论文,但该论文并未明确声称实现了拓扑量子比特,而是报告了一些关键的设备特征。其他专家对此表示担忧,认为微软的声明可能会导致对量子计算机能力的期望过高。尽管如此,研究人员普遍支持微软在拓扑量子计算机方面的努力。

🔬微软研究人员声称制造出首个拓扑量子比特,旨在克服传统量子计算的错误限制,但该声明缺乏同行评审的支持,引发了科学界的争议。

⚠️《自然》杂志发表的论文虽然报告了关键设备特征,但明确指出其结果并不代表马约拉纳零模(MZMs)的存在证据,而MZMs是拓扑量子比特的基础。

🗣️专家们对微软发布新闻稿的方式表示担忧,认为在没有同行评审支持的情况下做出如此声明可能会误导公众,并对量子计算领域造成不利影响。

🛠️尽管存在争议,但微软在材料科学和制造方面取得的成就依然值得肯定,他们成功制造出包含八个MZM拓扑量子比特的芯片,并计划扩展到一百万个。

⏳即使微软的声明最终成立,从单个MZM到量子计算机的道路仍然漫长,拓扑量子计算可能落后于其他平台20-30年,仍需大量努力才能充分利用拓扑保护。

Researchers at Microsoft in the US claim to have made the first topological quantum bit (qubit) – a potentially transformative device that could make quantum computing robust against the errors that currently restrict what it can achieve. “If the claim stands, it would be a scientific milestone for the field of topological quantum computing and physics beyond”, says Scott Aaronson, a computer scientist at the University of Texas at Austin.

However, the claim is controversial because the evidence supporting it has not yet been presented in a peer-reviewed paper. It is made in a press release from Microsoft accompanying a paper in Nature (638 651) that has been written by more than 160 researchers from the company’s Azure Quantum team. The paper stops short of claiming a topological qubit but instead reports some of the key device characterization underpinning it.

Writing in a peer-review file accompanying the paper, the Nature editorial team says that it sought additional input from two of the article’s reviewers to “establish its technical correctness”, concluding that “the results in this manuscript do not represent evidence for the presence of Majorana zero modes [MZMs] in the reported devices.”. A MZM is a quasiparticle (a particle-like collective electronic state) that can act as a topological qubit.

“That’s a big no-no”

“The peer-reviewed publication is quite clear [that it contains] no proof for topological qubits”, says Winfried Hensinger, a physicist at the University of Sussex who works on quantum computing using trapped ions. “But the press release speaks differently. In academia that’s a big no-no: you shouldn’t make claims that are not supported by a peer-reviewed publication” – or that have at least been presented in a preprint.

Chetan Nayak, leader of Microsoft Azure Quantum, which is based in Redmond, Washington, says that the evidence for a topological qubit was obtained in the period between submission of the paper in March 2024 and its publication. He will present those results at a talk at the Global Physics Summit of the American Physical Society in Annaheim in March.

But Hensinger is concerned that “the press release doesn’t make it clear what the paper does and doesn’t contain”. He worries that some might conclude that the strong claim of having made a topological qubit is now supported by a paper in Nature. “We don’t need to make these claims – that is just unhealthy and will really hurt the field”, he says, because it could lead to unrealistic expectations about what quantum computers can do.

As with the qubits used in current quantum computers, such as superconducting components or trapped ions, MZMs would be able to encode superpositions of the two readout states (representing a 1 or 0). By quantum-entangling such qubits, information could be manipulated in ways not possible for classical computers, greatly speeding up certain kinds of computation. In MZMs the two states are distinguished by “parity”: whether the quasiparticles contain even or odd numbers of electrons.

Built-in error protection

As MZMs are “topological” states, their settings cannot easily be flipped by random fluctuations to introduce errors into the calculation. Rather, the states are like a twist in a buckled belt that cannot be smoothed out unless the buckle is undone. Topological qubits would therefore suffer far less from the errors that afflict current quantum computers, and which limit the scale of the computations they can support. Because quantum error correction is one of the most challenging issues for scaling up quantum computers, “we want some built-in level of error protection”, explains Nayak.

It has long been thought that MZMs might be produced at the ends of nanoscale wires made of a superconducting material. Indeed, Microsoft researchers have been trying for several years to fabricate such structures and look for the characteristic signature of MZMs at their tips. But it can be hard to distinguish this signature from those of other electronic states that can form in these structures.

In 2018 researchers at labs in the US and the Netherlands (including the Delft University of Technology and Microsoft), claimed to have evidence of a MZM in such devices. However, they then had to retract the work after others raised problems with the data. “That history is making some experts cautious about the new claim”, says Aaronson.

Now, though, it seems that Nayak and colleagues have cracked the technical challenges. In the Nature paper, they report measurements in a nanowire heterostructure made of superconducting aluminium and semiconducting indium arsenide that are consistent with, but not definitive proof of, MZMs forming at the two ends. The crucial advance is an ability to accurately measure the parity of the electronic states. “The paper shows that we can do these measurements fast and accurately”, says Nayak.

The device is a remarkable achievement from the materials science and fabrication standpoint

Ivar Martin, Argonne National Laboratory

“The device is a remarkable achievement from the materials science and fabrication standpoint”, says Ivar Martin, a materials scientist at Argonne National Laboratory in the US. “They have been working hard on these problems, and seems like they are nearing getting the complexities under control.” In the press release, the Microsoft team claims now to have put eight MZM topological qubits on a chip called Majorana 1, which is designed to house a million of them (see figure).

Even if the Microsoft claim stands up, a lot will still need to be done to get from a single MZM to a quantum computer, says Hensinger. Topological quantum computing is “probably 20–30 years behind the other platforms”, he says. Martin agrees. “Even if everything checks out and what they have realized are MZMs, cleaning them up to take full advantage of topological protection will still require significant effort,” he says.

Regardless of the debate about the results and how they have been announced, researchers are supportive of the efforts at Microsoft to produce a topological quantum computer. “As a scientist who likes to see things tried, I’m grateful that at least one player stuck with the topological approach even when it ended up being a long, painful slog”, says Aaronson.

“Most governments won’t fund such work, because it’s way too risky and expensive”, adds Hensinger. “So it’s very nice to see that Microsoft is stepping in there.”

This article forms part of Physics World‘s contribution to the 2025 International Year of Quantum Science and Technology (IYQ), which aims to raise global awareness of quantum physics and its applications.

Stayed tuned to Physics World and our international partners throughout the next 12 months for more coverage of the IYQ.

Find out more on our quantum channel.

The post Experts weigh in on Microsoft’s topological qubit claim appeared first on Physics World.

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拓扑量子比特 量子计算 马约拉纳零模 微软 量子技术
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