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| Version | Summary | Created by | Modification | Content Size | Created at | Operation |
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| 1 | Brady D. Lund | -- | 739 | 2025-10-22 08:15:52 | | | |
| 2 | Perry Fu | Meta information modification | 739 | 2025-10-24 07:11:58 | | |
Quantum computing is an emerging field in computing technology that harnesses the principles of quantum mechanics—including superposition, entanglement, and quantum tunneling—to process information in fundamentally new ways. While classical computers use bits that represent states of either 0 or 1, quantum computers use quantum bits, or qubits. Unlike classical bits, a qubit can exist in a superposition of the logical states 0 and 1 simultaneously. This property allows quantum-powered systems to perform certain complex computations much faster than classical computing systems. Quantum computing holds great potential to transform many sectors by enabling breakthroughs in quantum cryptography, information retrieval, optimization, and artificial intelligence. Through quantum algorithms such as Grover’s and Shor’s algorithms, quantum computers can significantly accelerate the speed of data searching and break encryption systems that would take classical computers billions of years to crack. While still in the relatively early stages of development, quantum computers hold considerable potential to shape our next generation of computing.
| Category | Platform | Type | Connectivity | Strengths | Limitations | Maturity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hardware | Google Willow [4] | Superconducting (transmon) | Planar grid and nearest-neighbor | Fast gates; advanced calibration & benchmarking pipelines | Cryogenics; crosstalk; fidelity scaling | Research & Noisy intermediate-scale quantum computing (NISQ)-class flagship devices |
| Hardware | IBM Quantum [5] | Superconducting (transmon) | Coupling-map topologies (planar) | Cloud access; strong toolchain | Coherence & connectivity constraints typical of superconductors | Broad device family; leading NISQ access |
| Hardware | IonQ [6] | Trapped ions (hyperfine/optical) | All-to-all within a single chain | Long coherence; high single/two-qubit fidelities | Slower gates; scaling across chains needs photonic links | Commercial cloud systems; strong small to medium-circuit performance |
| Software | Qiskit [7] | SDK (Python) | IBM devices; providers for others; simulators | Rich transpiler; visualization; pulse-level access | IBM-centric by default | Actively maintained; wide community use |
| Software | Cirq [8] | SDK (Python) | Google devices and compatible simulators | Native abstractions; noise models; calibration workflows | Google-centric | Research & production tooling within Google ecosystem |
| Software | Microsoft QDK [9] | SDK (Q#, Python & C# interop) | Azure Quantum ecosystem; simulators; resource estimation | High-level Q# language; resource estimation; heterogeneous backend routing | Heavier tooling stack; best within Azure flow | Active tooling; growing backend support |