PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Phasecraft reveals a more efficient method for modelling electrons in materials

UK quantum software startup Phasecraft, spun out of UCL and University of Bristol, releases peer-reviewed research that shows significant improvement beyond previous techniques for simulating fermions on quantum computers

Phasecraft reveals a more efficient method for modelling electrons in materials
2021-07-13
(Press-News.org) One of the most significant challenges in the global R&D effort towards better energy technologies -- efficient and accurate material simulation -- may be one step closer to being solved, based on new techniques released by UK-based quantum software startup Phasecraft.

The new peer-reviewed study in the Physical Review B journal from the American Physical Society sets out a novel technique for modelling fermionic particles -- like electrons -- which significantly reduces the quantum hardware resources needed to perform simulations.

Phasecraft's Joel Klassen, who co-led the study, explained, "One of the most exciting potential applications for quantum computing is simulating physical systems like materials. Using new tools, like quantum computers, to develop a better understanding of how the natural world works has historically often led to dramatic technological breakthroughs. Our results reduce the resources required to perform these simulations, bringing this application closer to reality."

"Many important fields such as Chemistry and Materials Science are concerned with the dynamics of fermion particles in physical systems - in the form of electrons. Fermions are notoriously difficult to simulate on regular computers so being able to simulate them efficiently on a quantum device would provide a faster path to tackling hard problems in these areas of research such as understanding high temperature superconductivity or improving chemical reaction efficiency," commented Charles Derby, a Phasecraft team member and PhD candidate at UCL, who co-led the research.

"Our compact representation of fermions outperforms all previous representations improving memory use and algorithm size each by at least 25% - a significant step towards realising practical scientific applications on near-term quantum computers."

Although quantum hardware has seen significant improvements in recent years, existing devices remain limited and prone to a buildup of errors, and a gap exists between what hardware can do and the resources software needs. The new modelling technique not only helps close this gap, but has the added benefit of being able to detect errors in the computation. The lead authors, along with their collaborators, Toby Cubitt and Johannes Bausch at Phasecraft, lay out how this additional feature could be used to help address these errors.

Building on these findings, Phasecraft is conducting small-scale experiments to demonstrate these resource improvements and error mitigation methods on quantum hardware, as well as working with established industry partners to explore how they may be applied to battery material simulation.

"Another compelling part of this new approach is the error detection and mitigation integrated into the fermion encoding, which are particularly important on near-term, noisy quantum hardware,' explained Phasecraft consultant and research contributor Johannes Bausch.

Phasecraft co-founder and research contributor Toby Cubitt commented "At Phasecraft, we aim to speed up the timeline for quantum advantage. This new research continues our pioneering achievements for creating compact, resource-efficient, error-resilient software designed for the limited capacity of near-term quantum hardware. By developing these new techniques that are tuned to quantum hardware's limitations, Phasecraft may enable potential breakthroughs in energy efficiency and storage, chemistry, and far beyond."

INFORMATION:

This new research adds to previous research advances, including representing the Fermi-Hubbard model, also featured in the Physical Review B journal.

Citation: C. Derby, J. Klassen, J. Bausch, T. S. Cubitt, Compact Fermion To Qubit Encodings, Physical Review B, Vol. 104, Iss. 3 -- 15 July 2021. http://www.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.104.035118

Read the Phasecraft insight piece here: https://www.phasecraft.io/insight/quantum-simulations-of-fermionic-many-body-systems

Additional information on Phasecraft advances are online here: http://www.phasecraft.io/insight

About Phasecraft Phasecraft is taking quantum theory from research to reality, faster. Phasecraft was founded in 2019 by Toby Cubitt, Ashley Montanaro, and John Morton, expert quantum scientists who have spent decades leading top research teams at UCL and the University of Bristol. Phasecraft collaborates with leading quantum hardware companies, including Google, IBM, and Rigetti, academic and industry leaders, to develop high-efficiency software that evolves quantum computing from experimental demonstrations to useful applications. Learn more: http://www.phasecraft.io


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Phasecraft reveals a more efficient method for modelling electrons in materials

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study shows forests play greater role in depositing toxic mercury across the globe

Study shows forests play greater role in depositing toxic mercury across the globe
2021-07-13
LOWELL, Mass. - Researchers led by a UMass Lowell environmental science professor say mercury measurements in a Massachusetts forest indicate the toxic element is deposited in forests across the globe in much greater quantities than previously understood. The team's results underscore concern for the health and well-being of people, wildlife and waterways, according to Prof. Daniel Obrist, as mercury accumulating in forests ultimately runs off into streams and rivers, ending up in lakes and oceans. Mercury is a highly toxic pollutant that threatens fish, birds, mammals and humans. Hundreds of tons of it are ...

Marijuana legalization linked to temporary decrease in opioid-related emergency visits

Marijuana legalization linked to temporary decrease in opioid-related emergency visits
2021-07-12
PITTSBURGH, July 12, 2021 - States that legalize recreational marijuana experience a short-term decline in opioid-related emergency department visits, particularly among 25- to 44-year-olds and men, according to an analysis led by the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. Published today in the journal Health Economics, the study shows that even after the temporary decline wears off, recreational cannabis laws are not associated with increases in opioid-related emergency department visits. "This isn't trivial--a decline in opioid-related emergency department visits, even if only for six months, is a welcome public health development," said lead author Coleman Drake, Ph.D., assistant professor ...

AAN issues ethical guidance for dementia diagnosis and care

2021-07-12
MINNEAPOLIS - The American Academy of Neurology (AAN), the world's largest association of neurologists with more than 36,000 members, is issuing ethical guidance for neurologists and neuroscience professionals who care for people with Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. The new position statement is published in the July 12, 2021 online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. This update to the 1996 AAN position statement was developed by the Ethics, Law, and Humanities Committee, a joint committee of the American Academy of Neurology, American Neurological Association and Child Neurology Society. "Dementia care and scientific understanding have advanced considerably, including greater recognition of non-Alzheimer's dementias and advances ...

Officers' tone of voice reflects racial disparities in policing

2021-07-12
The Black Lives Matter movement has brought increasing attention to disparities in how police officers treat Black and white Americans. Now, research published by the American Psychological Association finds that disparity may exist even in subtle differences in officers' tone of voice when they address Black and white drivers during routine traffic stops. In the study, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, researchers gathered short audio excerpts from police body camera footage and found that when officers spoke to Black men at traffic stops, their tone of voice conveyed less warmth, respect and ease than when they spoke to white men. The researchers also found that these subtle negative interactions ...

Direct flights save lives! New airline routes can increase kidney sharing by more than 7%

2021-07-12
INFORMS Journal Management Science Study Key Takeaways: Lack of direct airline routes limit the flexibility of organ transplantation policies. A new airline route can increase the number of kidneys shared between different regions by more than 7% while also decreasing the organ discard rate. An increase in the quantity of kidneys does not come with a decrease in kidney quality. CATONSVILLE, MD, July 12, 2021 - It's a supply and demand problem, it's a transportation problem, it's a donor problem - and that just scratches the surface. According ...

Demonstration of World Record: 319 Tb/s Transmission over 3,001 km with 4-core fiber

Demonstration of World Record: 319 Tb/s Transmission over 3,001 km with 4-core fiber
2021-07-12
[Points] 319 Tb/s long-haul transmission of wideband (>120 nm) S, C and L-bands signal using 552 PDM-16QAM, wavelength-division multiplexed channels in a 4-core optical fiber Long-distance transmission over 3,001 km enabled by adoption of both erbium and thulium doped-fiber amplifiers and distributed Raman amplification Demonstration shows potential of SDM fibers with standard-cladding diameter and compatibility with existing cabling technologies for near-term adoption of high-throughput SDM fiber systems [Abstract] Researchers from the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT, President: TOKUDA ...

Harnessing the dark side

Harnessing the dark side
2021-07-12
When we think about singularities, we tend to think of massive black holes in faraway galaxies or a distant future with runaway AI, but singularities are all around us. Singularities are simply a place where certain parameters are undefined. The North and South Pole, for example, are what's known as coordinate singularities because they don't have a defined longitude. Optical singularities typically occur when the phase of light with a specific wavelength, or color, is undefined. These regions appear completely dark. Today, some optical singularities, including ...

Neutron-clustering effect in nuclear reactors demonstrated for first time

Neutron-clustering effect in nuclear reactors demonstrated for first time
2021-07-12
Los Alamos, N.M., July 12, 2021--For the first time, the long-theorized neutron-clustering effect in nuclear reactors has been demonstrated, which could improve reactor safety and create more accurate simulations, according to a new study recently published in the journal Nature Communications Physics. "The neutron-clustering phenomenon had been theorized for years, but it had never been analyzed in a working reactor," said Nicholas Thompson, an engineer with the Los Alamos Advanced Nuclear Technology Group. "The findings indicate that, as neutrons fission and create more neutrons, some go on to form large lineages of clusters while others quickly die off, resulting in so-called 'power tilts,' ...

BU researchers develop novel, woman controlled contraceptive product

2021-07-12
(Boston)--Despite the availability of numerous effective birth control methods, more than 40 percent of pregnancies worldwide are unintended. In addition to contributing significantly to population growth, unintended pregnancies can have pronounced adverse effects on maternal physical, mental and economic wellbeing. Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) and ZabBio (San Diego, CA) have developed an anti-sperm monoclonal antibody, the Human Contraception Antibody (HCA), which they found to be safe and possess potent sperm agglutination (clumping) and immobilization activity in laboratory tests. "HCA appears to be suitable for contraceptive use and could be administered vaginally in a dissolvable film for a ...

Genome editing for food: how do people react?

2021-07-12
A research team from the University of Göttingen and the University of British Columbia (Canada) has investigated how people in five different countries react to various usages of genome editing in agriculture. The researchers looked at which uses are accepted and how the risks and benefits of the new breeding technologies are rated by people. The results show only minor differences between the countries studied - Germany, Italy, Canada, Austria and the USA. In all countries, making changes to the genome is more likely to be deemed acceptable when used in crops rather than in livestock. The study was published in Agriculture and Human Values. Relatively new breeding technologies, such as CRISPR gene editing, have enabled a range of new opportunities for plant and animal breeding. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NTIDE: Disability employment holds steady after data hiatus

Social lives of viruses affect antiviral resistance

Dose of psilocybin, dash of rabies point to treatment for depression

Helping health care providers navigate social, political, and legal barriers to patient care

Barrow Neurological Institute, University of Calgary study urges “major change” to migraine treatment in Emergency Departments

Using smartphones to improve disaster search and rescue

Robust new photocatalyst paves the way for cleaner hydrogen peroxide production and greener chemical manufacturing

Ultrafast material captures toxic PFAS at record speed and capacity

Plant phenolic acids supercharge old antibiotics against multidrug resistant E. coli

UNC-Chapel Hill study shows AI can dramatically speed up digitizing natural history collections

OYE Therapeutics closes $5M convertible note round, advancing toward clinical development

Membrane ‘neighborhood’ helps transporter protein regulate cell signaling

Naval aviator turned NPS doctoral student earns national recognition for applied quantum research

Astronomers watch stars explode in real time through new images

Carbon-negative building material developed at Worcester Polytechnic Institute published in matter

Free radicals caught in the act with slow spectroscopy

New research highlights Syntax Bio’s platform for simple yet powerful programming of human stem cells

Researchers from the HSE University investigated reading in adolescents

Penn Nursing study: Virtual nursing programs in hospitals fall short of expectations

Although public overwhelmingly supports hepatitis B vaccine for a newborn, partisan differences exist

DFW backs UTA research to bolster flood resilience

AI brain scan model identifies stroke, brain tumors and aneurysms – helping radiologists triage and speed up diagnoses

U.S. News & World Report gives Hebrew Rehabilitation Center highest rating

Optica and DPG name Antoine Browaeys 2026 Herbert Walther Award recipient

The presence of a gun in the home increases the risk of suicide by three to five times

PFAS exposure and endocrine disruption among women

Vaccines and the 2024 US presidential election

New approach narrows uncertainty in future warming and remaining carbon budget for 2 °C

When pregnancy emergencies collide with state abortion bans

American College of Cardiology supports front of package nutrition labeling

[Press-News.org] Phasecraft reveals a more efficient method for modelling electrons in materials
UK quantum software startup Phasecraft, spun out of UCL and University of Bristol, releases peer-reviewed research that shows significant improvement beyond previous techniques for simulating fermions on quantum computers