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

Caltech team sets record with 6,100-qubit array

The neutral-atom platform shows promise for scaling up quantum computers

2025-09-24
(Press-News.org)

Quantum computers will need large numbers of qubits to tackle challenging problems in physics, chemistry, and beyond. Unlike classical bits, qubits can exist in two states at once—a phenomenon called superposition. This quirk of quantum physics gives quantum computers the potential to perform certain complex calculations better than their classical counterparts, but it also means the qubits are fragile. To compensate, researchers are building quantum computers with extra, redundant qubits to correct any errors. That is why robust quantum computers will require hundreds of thousands of qubits.

 

Now, in a step toward this vision, Caltech physicists have created the largest qubit array ever assembled: 6,100 neutral-atom qubits trapped in a grid by lasers. Previous arrays of this kind contained only hundreds of qubits.   

  

This milestone comes amid a rapidly growing race to scale up quantum computers. There are several approaches in development, including those based on superconducting circuits, trapped ions, and neutral atoms, as used in the new study. 

 

"This is an exciting moment for neutral-atom quantum computing," says Manuel Endres, professor of physics at Caltech. "We can now see a pathway to large error-corrected quantum computers. The building blocks are in place." Endres is the principal investigator of the research published today in Nature. Three Caltech graduate students led the study: Hannah Manetsch, Gyohei Nomura, and Elie Bataille. 

   

The team used optical tweezers—highly focused laser beams—to trap thousands of individual cesium atoms in a grid. To build the array of atoms, the researchers split a laser beam into 12,000 tweezers, which together held 6,100 atoms in a vacuum chamber. "On the screen, we can actually see each qubit as a pinpoint of light," Manetsch says. "It's a striking image of quantum hardware at a large scale."

 

A key achievement was showing that this larger scale did not come at the expense of quality. Even with more than 6,000 qubits in a single array, the team kept them in superposition for about 13 seconds—nearly 10 times longer than what was possible in previous similar arrays—while manipulating individual qubits with 99.98 percent accuracy. "Large scale, with more atoms, is often thought to come at the expense of accuracy, but our results show that we can do both," Nomura says. "Qubits aren't useful without quality. Now we have quantity and quality."

 

The team also demonstrated that they could move the atoms hundreds of micrometers across the array while maintaining superposition. The ability to shuttle qubits is a key feature of neutral-atom quantum computers that enables more efficient error correction compared with traditional, hard-wired platforms like superconducting qubits. 

 

Manetsch compares the task of moving the individual atoms while keeping them in a state of superposition to balancing a glass of water while running. "Trying to hold an atom while moving is like trying to not let the glass of water tip over. Trying to also keep the atom in a state of superposition is like being careful to not run so fast that water splashes over," she says. 

 

The next big milestone for the field is implementing quantum error correction at the scale of thousands of physical qubits, and this work shows that neutral atoms are a strong candidate to get there. "Quantum computers will have to encode information in a way that's tolerant to errors, so we can actually do calculations of value," Bataille says. "Unlike in classical computers, qubits can't simply be copied due to the so-called no-cloning theorem, so error correction has to rely on more subtle strategies."   

 

Looking ahead, the researchers plan to link the qubits in their array together in a state of entanglement, where particles become correlated and behave as one. Entanglement is a necessary step for quantum computers to move beyond simply storing information in superposition; entanglement will allow them to begin carrying out full quantum computations. It is also what gives quantum computers their ultimate power—the ability to simulate nature itself, where entanglement shapes the behavior of matter at every scale. The goal is clear: to harness entanglement to unlock new scientific discoveries, from revealing new phases of matter to guiding the design of novel materials and modeling the quantum fields that govern space-time.  

 

"It’s exciting that we are creating machines to help us learn about the universe in ways that only quantum mechanics can teach us," Manetsch says. 

  

The new study, "A tweezer array with 6100 highly coherent atomic qubits," was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Weston Havens Foundation, the National Science Foundation via its Graduate Research Fellowship Program and the Institute for Quantum Information and Matter (IQIM) at Caltech, the Army Research Office, the U.S. Department of Energy including its Quantum Systems Accelerator, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Air Force Office for Scientific Research, the Heising-Simons Foundation, and the AWS Quantum Postdoctoral Fellowship. Other authors include Caltech's Kon H. Leung, the AWS Quantum senior postdoctoral scholar research associate in physics, as well as former Caltech postdoctoral scholar Xudong Lv, now at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study reveals how CEOs become social media celebrities

2025-09-24
Hoboken, N.J., September 24, 2025 — A new study published in the Journal of Management Studies uncovers how top executives rise to celebrity status on social media — and why it matters for business and beyond.  Drawing on more than a decade of data from 320 CEOs of S&P 1500 companies with personal accounts on X (formerly Twitter), researchers analyzed over 250,000 CEO posts and 1.6 million user mentions of those CEOs. They found that CEOs who post more often, use a positive tone, and discuss a variety of topics are significantly more likely to receive high levels of both ...

UT launches industrial affiliates program to research sustainable data center growth

2025-09-24
The rapid growth of AI is driving great interest in building large, power-hungry data centers across the state. The University of Texas at Austin has launched a new research consortium to help inform industry partners on options for more sustainable growth of this new industry. The consortium – called Collaborative Optimization & Management of Power Allocation, Surface & Subsurface strategies (COMPASS) – was announced last week at a data center workshop for industry leaders and policy makers led by the UT Bureau of Economic Geology, which is part of the Jackson School of Geosciences. “Our goal is to bring all the players to the table,” said ...

Do CT scans increase childhood cancer risk? A UF researcher has the answer

2025-09-24
A recent study links exposure to radiation from medical imaging to a small-but-significant risk of blood cancers among children and adolescents.  But do not panic. The study concludes the benefits of medical imaging outweigh the minimal risks.  Funded by the National Cancer Institute, the study will help medical personnel make informed decisions about using imaging on children. The study concluded that while ionizing radiation is a carcinogen, the benefit-to-risk ratio favors CT imaging of children when imaging is justified and the technique minimizes adverse ...

uOttawa's Telfer School of Management and Canadian Centre for Cyber Security partner in strategic collaboration

2025-09-24
The Telfer School of Management has signed a new strategic partnership with the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (Cyber Centre) to provide cutting-edge professional development to public sector and critical infrastructure leaders across the country. Telfer Executive Programs, part of the Telfer School of Management, designed and delivered the immersive Leadership Crisis Simulation at the uOttawa-IBM Cyber Range. This initiative led to the establishment of a partnership between Telfer and the Cyber Centre to expand the offerings available at the uOttawa-Cyber Range, including new crisis ...

SwRI’s Glein selected to give AGU Carl Sagan Lecture

2025-09-24
SAN ANTONIO — September. 24, 2025 — The American Geophysical Union (AGU) has selected Southwest Research Institute’s Dr. Christopher Glein to present the Carl Sagan Lecture at its Fall meeting. He will present “Seafaring in Space: A Personal Voyage to Enceladus,” discussing the Saturn moon with a deep ocean beneath its frozen surface, offering some of the most compelling evidence of habitability in our solar system. AGU, the world’s largest Earth and space science association, ...

Stem cells may offer new hope for end-stage kidney disease treatment

2025-09-24
ROCHESTER, Minn. — More than 4 million people worldwide have end-stage kidney disease that requires hemodialysis, a treatment in which a machine filters waste from the blood. Hemodialysis is a precursor to kidney transplant. To prepare for it, patients typically undergo surgery to connect an artery and a vein in the arm, creating an arteriovenous fistula (AVF) that allows blood to flow through the vein for treatment. However, AVF fails about 60 percent of the time due to vein narrowing. This is a major barrier to effective treatment. Mayo Clinic researchers found that transplanting patients' own stem cells from fat cells into the ...

Rice sociologist’s journey from simple curiosity to NSF-backed research reveals how physical infrastructure shapes inequality

2025-09-24
As a graduate student living in New Haven, Connecticut, Elizabeth Roberto said she couldn’t stop wondering why certain neighborhoods seemed connected while others were quietly walled off. “There were these places where the roads just stopped,” Roberto recalled. “Like they were meant to go somewhere — but didn’t.” It was the kind of everyday thing the average person might drive past without a second thought. But for Roberto, it sparked a question that would stay with her for years: What happens when barriers separate people — not ...

Discontinuation of semaglutide among older adults with diabetes in the US and Japan

2025-09-24
About The Study: In this binational study of older adults with diabetes, nearly 6 in 10 U.S. adults and 3 in 10 Japanese adults discontinued glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) within 12 months of initiating injectable semaglutide. Patients with established cardiovascular disease and chronic kidney disease had higher discontinuation rates in both countries, which is troublesome given the substantial clinical benefit these high-risk individuals would be expected to derive from GLP-1RA therapy. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Dhruv S. Kazi, MD, MSc, MS, email dkazi@bidmc.harvard.edu. To ...

Measles vaccination coverage after a post-elimination outbreak

2025-09-24
About The Study: In this repeated cross-sectional study of 149,000 children in a large central Ohio primary care network during the 20 months after outbreak onset, all measures of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) coverage remained well below the 93% herd immunity threshold. These persistent, population-wide immunity gaps suggest the need for sustained, equity-focused public health strategies to maintain measles elimination. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Rosemary A. Martoma, ...

Hospital price markup and outcomes of major elective operations

2025-09-24
About The Study: This cross-sectional study found that considerable variation in price markup exists across hospitals and that high-markup hospitals demonstrated both lower quality and value of care. These findings underscore that high-markup hospitals represent a key initial target for national policy efforts targeting pricing regulation, transparency, and quality improvement.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Peyman Benharash, MD, email pbenharash@mednet.ucla.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Center for BrainHealth launches Fourth Annual BrainHealth Week in 2026

Why some messages are more convincing than others

National Foundation for Cancer Research CEO Sujuan Ba Named One of OncoDaily’s 100 Most Influential Oncology CEOs of 2025

New analysis disputes historic earthquake, tsunami and death toll on Greek island

Drexel study finds early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

Study finds Alzheimer's disease can be evaluated with brain stimulation

Cells that are not our own may unlock secrets about our health

Caring Cross and Boston Children’s Hospital collaborate to expand access to gene therapy for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia

Mount Sinai review maps the path forward for cancer vaccines, highlighting promise of personalized and combination approaches

Illinois study: How a potential antibiotics ban could affect apple growers

UC Irvine and Jefferson Health researchers find differences between two causes of heart valve narrowing

Ancien DNA pushes back record of treponemal disease-causing bacteria by 3,000 years

Human penis size influences female attraction and male assessment of rivals

Scientists devise way to track space junk as it falls to earth

AI is already writing almost one-third of new software code

A 5,500-year-old genome rewrites the origins of syphilis

Tracking uncontrolled space debris reentry using sonic booms

Endogenous retroviruses promote early human zygotic development

Malicious AI swarms pose emergent threats to democracy

Progenitor cells in the brain constantly attempt to produce new myelin-producing brain cells

Quantum measurements with entangled atomic clouds

Mayo Clinic researchers use AI to predict patient falls based on core density in middle age

Moffitt study develops new tool to predict how cancer evolves

National Multiple Sclerosis Society awards Dr. Manuel A. Friese the 2025 Barancik Prize for Innovation in MS Research

PBM profits obscured by mergers and accounting practices, USC Schaeffer white paper shows

Breath carries clues to gut microbiome health

New study links altered cellular states to brain structure

Palaeontology: Ancient giant kangaroos could hop to it when they needed to

Decoded: How cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system

ISSCR develops roadmap to accelerate pluripotent stem cell-derived therapies to patients

[Press-News.org] Caltech team sets record with 6,100-qubit array
The neutral-atom platform shows promise for scaling up quantum computers