What is Quantum Computing?
Historical Background
Key Points
10 points- 1.
Qubits: The basic unit of quantum information, capable of representing 0, 1, or both simultaneously (superposition), unlike classical bits that can only be 0 or 1.
- 2.
Superposition: Allows a qubit to exist in multiple states at once, enabling quantum computers to process vast amounts of information in parallel.
- 3.
Entanglement: A phenomenon where two or more qubits become linked, such that the state of one instantaneously influences the others, regardless of physical separation.
- 4.
Quantum Gates: Operations applied to qubits to perform computations, analogous to logic gates in classical computers, but operating on quantum states.
- 5.
Decoherence: A major challenge where quantum states lose their coherence (quantum properties) due to interaction with the environment, leading to errors.
- 6.
Error Correction: Sophisticated techniques required to mitigate errors caused by decoherence and other noise, crucial for building fault-tolerant quantum computers.
- 7.
Applications: Potential to revolutionize fields like drug discovery, material science, financial modeling, artificial intelligence, and breaking certain cryptographic algorithms.
- 8.
Hardware Platforms: Various technologies are being explored, including superconducting qubits (Google, IBM), trapped ions (IonQ), photonic qubits, and topological qubits.
- 9.
Quantum Volume: A metric used to measure the overall performance of a quantum computer, considering both the number of qubits and their error rates.
- 10.
Quantum Annealing: A specific type of quantum computing optimized for solving optimization problems, distinct from universal gate-based quantum computers.
Visual Insights
Evolution of Quantum Computing (1980s-2025)
This timeline traces the theoretical origins and major milestones in the development of quantum computing, highlighting its journey from concept to an emerging technology.
Quantum computing, initially a theoretical concept, has seen rapid advancements in the last few decades, moving from abstract algorithms to tangible, albeit nascent, hardware. This timeline captures the key intellectual and technological leaps that define its progression.
- 1980sRichard Feynman proposes the idea of using quantum systems to simulate other quantum systems more efficiently.
- 1994Peter Shor develops Shor's algorithm, demonstrating that quantum computers could efficiently factor large numbers, posing a threat to current encryption.
- 1996Lov Grover develops Grover's algorithm for searching unsorted databases faster than classical algorithms.
- 2000sFirst experimental demonstrations of small-scale quantum processors using various architectures (e.g., NMR, trapped ions).
- 2016IBM launches the first cloud-based quantum computing platform, making quantum resources accessible to the public.
- 2019Google claims 'quantum supremacy' with its Sycamore processor, performing a task intractable for classical supercomputers.
- 2023India approves the National Quantum Mission (NQM) with significant funding to boost R&D in quantum technologies, including computing.
- 2024-25Continued rapid increase in qubit count and stability in experimental processors; advancements in quantum error correction and new quantum algorithms.
Quantum Computing: Key Statistics & India's Initiatives (2025)
A dashboard highlighting crucial statistics related to quantum computing, with a focus on India's National Quantum Mission.
- National Quantum Mission (NQM) Budget
- INR 6,000 CroreN/A
- Approx. Global Investment in Quantum Tech (2024)
- ~ $40 Billion+20% (YoY estimate)
- Highest Stable Qubit Count (Research Labs, 2025)
- Hundreds of Qubits+50% (YoY estimate)
- Quantum Computing Market Size (2025)
- ~ $1.5 Billion+35% (YoY estimate)
Approved in 2023, this significant investment aims to propel India into the forefront of quantum technology development over 8 years.
Governments and private sectors globally are rapidly increasing investments, indicating a 'quantum race' for technological leadership.
While commercial systems have fewer, research labs are pushing boundaries, though stability and error rates remain challenges.
The market is nascent but growing exponentially, driven by R&D and early adoption in specific sectors like finance and pharma.
Recent Developments
5 developmentsIndia launched the National Quantum Mission (NQM) in 2023 with an outlay of ₹6,003.65 crore to foster quantum technology development over eight years.
Google's 'Quantum Echoes' experiment, as highlighted in the news, utilizes a 65-qubit Willow superconducting processor to study quantum information dynamics.
IBM has continued to unveil increasingly powerful quantum processors, including those with over 1000 qubits (e.g., 'Condor').
Growing global investment from governments and private sectors in quantum research, hardware development, and algorithm design.
Focus on developing quantum software and algorithms alongside hardware to unlock practical applications.
