https://arstechnica.com/science/2025/02/microsoft-builds-its-first-qubits-lays-out-roadmap-for-quantum-computing/Quote:
Quasiparticles are collections of particles (and, in some cases, field lines) that can be described mathematically as if they were a single particle with properties that are distinct from their constituents. The best-known of these are probably the Cooper pairs that electrons form in superconducting materials.
Microsoft is focusing on a topological phenomenon, behavior that occurs when particles are confined in some way. In this case, it's a quasiparticle that forms at the interface between aluminum that's made to superconduct by the hardware's extremely low operating temperature and a tiny wire of indium-arsenide semiconductor. The behavior of particles of this sort was first described by the physicist Ettore Majorana and goes by the name of a Majorana zero mode.
In theory, the electrons at the interface link up as Cooper pairs. If there's an odd number of electrons, the unpaired one ends up delocalized within the wire, and you detect the Majorana zero modes at each end of the wire (this also requires the presence of a strong magnetic field). Its behavior is described by quantum mechanics, allowing it to be used as a qubit. But when Microsoft set out to use it, nobody had ever demonstrated that Majorana zero modes exist.
Quote:
"It's complex in that we had to show a new state of matter to get there, but after that, it's fairly simple. It tiles out. You have this much simpler architecture that promises a much faster path to scale," Krysta Svore, Microsoft's principal research manager, said in the statement.
Breakthrough quantum chip that harnesses new state of matter could set us on the path to quantum supremacy
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-025-00527-z
Sounded crazy, but now I read it and it makes total sense.
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The technological leap has been described as significant as the leap from vacuum tubes to transistors.