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posted by cmn32480 on Saturday December 12 2015, @02:45AM   Printer-friendly
from the bigger-and-faster dept.

$46 Million in Funding for Silicon-Based Quantum Computing at UNSW

Physicists at the University of New South Wales in Australia have received $26 million from the federal government and $10 million from the Commonwealth Bank and Telstra to advance work on a silicon-based quantum computer:

Telstra and the Commonwealth Bank have each pledged $10 million in cash and in-kind support over the next five years for research into the development of silicon quantum computing technology in Australia.

The funds will go to the Centre for Quantum Computation and Communications Technology (CQC2T), which is headquartered at the University of New South Wales.

It comes just a day after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced an additional $26 million over five years for CQC2T as part of the federal government's innovation plan.

The funds will go towards the development of a silicon quantum integrated circuit, as part of a broader bid by researchers to build the world's first silicon-based quantum computer.

IBM to Develop Hardware to Wipe Out Errors in Quantum Computing

IBM has also received more funding to pursue universal quantum computing:

The race to build a full-blown quantum computer is heating up. Tech giant IBM has been working on error-correcting techniques for quantum hardware, and has now won funding from the US Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) to take it to the next level.

[...] Chow says they need around 20 physical qubits to create one logical qubit, but packing the qubits close together will be tricky. "When you put many of them together, you don't know that they are going to work the same way as when you just have one," he says. "How you properly engineer this larger chip is going to be a big challenge."

IBM and IARPA have not yet revealed how much funding is going into the five-year research programme, but money is already pouring into quantum computing around the world.


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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @06:12AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 12 2015, @06:12AM (#275319)

    The planes at the airport thing is a huge stretch. The airport already has an idea of who the owners might be. This is probably how some corporations haggle about the $$$$$: e.g. from article he linked to: "They've yet to pay the parking fee -- where do we send the bill?" If the Airport can somehow get ownership of the planes they might get more money than the fees...

    Someone trying to cheat someone or business as usual? Hard to tell nowadays ;).

    See: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-35068145 [bbc.com]

    Chief executive officer Blue Peterson claims that Malaysia Airports has refused to give him access to the planes, saying they needed to verify his paperwork.

    He told the BBC that officials wanted to see his registration papers. "But the planes have yet to be registered as they must first undergo maintenance checks. And I can't even go on the property to look at my own planes," he said.

    The planes were last registered in Iceland under one of its previous owners, Air Atlanta Icelandic, but were subsequently deregistered in 2011 and 2012, according to Malaysian media reports.

    See also: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysia/article/owner-of-unclaimed-planes-in-constant-contact-with-airport-operator-says-re [themalaysianinsider.com]

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