John Martinis is awarded the John Stewart Bell Prize
quantum computing
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Computer scientist Yufei Ding receives NSF Early CAREER Award to advance efforts to improve quantum applications
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Researchers partner with national labs in DOE-funded collaborations to expand research in quantum sciences
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Physicist Andy Howell discusses Star Trek science with cast, crew and fellow researchers
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Quantum physicist John Martinis appears in Nature’s 2019 list of top 10 moments in science
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UCSB/Google researchers demonstrate the power of 53 entangled qubits
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ECE professor receives Air Force Young Investigator Award for quantum computing
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Researchers in quantum computing professor John Martinis’ group outline their plan for quantum supremacy
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Researchers led by Matthew Fisher will investigate the brain’s potential for quantum computation
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Researchers are ready to study nature with a nine-qubit array
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Nano-‘hashtags’ could be the key to generating the highly sought Majorana quasiparticle
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Physicists develop a device that could provide conclusive evidence for the existence (or not) of non-Abelian anyons
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Researchers explore the balance between coherence and control with a novel platform for quantum processing
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Researchers at UCSB blur the line between classical and quantum physics by connecting chaos and entanglement
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Dirk Bouwmeester and colleagues discover a promising new route for combined optical and solid-state-based quantum information
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The inherent unreliability of quantum bits may be a thing of the past, thanks to a major milestone in quantum computing
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Several members of the Martinis Lab have been exploring qubits (quantum bits) for quantum simulation on a smaller scale
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This crop of NSF CAREER awardees include a chemical engineer, a computer scientist and a physicist
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Researchers develop a method for recording and controlling the quantum behavior of an electron
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Quantum hardware developed by physicists at UC Santa Barbara is among the Top 10 Physics Breakthroughs of 2011, as named by Physics World, the news organization of the Institute of Physics.
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Scientists have taken a new step toward quantum computing, which will use quantum mechanics to revolutionize the way information is processed. This research appears today in the online version of Nature magazine.
