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Sharper than lightning: Oxford’s one-in-6.7-million quantum breakthrough | |||
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ScienceDaily · Computers and Internet; Computer Modeling; Computer Science; Hacking; Quantum Computers; Distributed Computing; Communications; Math Puzzles | |||
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'''Article preview.'''<br> | |||
Physicists at the University of Oxford have set a new global benchmark for the<br> | |||
accuracy of controlling a single quantum bit, achieving the lowest-ever error rate for<br> | |||
a quantum logic operation--just 0.000015%, or one error in 6.7 million operations.<br> | |||
This record-breaking result represents nearly an order of magnitude improvement over<br> | |||
the previous benchmark, set by the same research group a decade ago.<br> | |||
The article is featured here because it connects current quantum research with a<br> | |||
broader scientific or technological problem.<br> | |||
The preview highlights the main idea while leaving the detailed evidence, figures and<br> | |||
technical discussion to the original source.<br> | |||
Topic area: Computers and Internet; Computer Modeling; Computer Science; Hacking;<br> | |||
Quantum Computers; Distributed Computing; Communications; Math Puzzles.<br> | |||
The selected source is ScienceDaily; the full article link appears below this preview. | |||
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[https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/06/250610074301.htm Read the full article at ScienceDaily ->] | |||
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External source: ScienceDaily. Selected external quantum article. | |||
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Credits: ScienceDaily | |||
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Revision as of 22:10, 20 May 2026
Image from or related to the featured external quantum article.
Featured external quantum article
Sharper than lightning: Oxford’s one-in-6.7-million quantum breakthrough
ScienceDaily · Computers and Internet; Computer Modeling; Computer Science; Hacking; Quantum Computers; Distributed Computing; Communications; Math Puzzles
Article preview.
Physicists at the University of Oxford have set a new global benchmark for the
accuracy of controlling a single quantum bit, achieving the lowest-ever error rate for
a quantum logic operation--just 0.000015%, or one error in 6.7 million operations.
This record-breaking result represents nearly an order of magnitude improvement over
the previous benchmark, set by the same research group a decade ago.
The article is featured here because it connects current quantum research with a
broader scientific or technological problem.
The preview highlights the main idea while leaving the detailed evidence, figures and
technical discussion to the original source.
Topic area: Computers and Internet; Computer Modeling; Computer Science; Hacking;
Quantum Computers; Distributed Computing; Communications; Math Puzzles.
The selected source is ScienceDaily; the full article link appears below this preview.
External source: ScienceDaily. Selected external quantum article.
Credits: ScienceDaily