Sveriges mest populära poddar
Quantum Computing 101

Hybrid Quantum Computing Breakthrough: How IBM Created an Impossible Molecule with 32 Electrons

4 min6 mars 2026
This is your Quantum Computing 101 podcast. # Quantum Computing 101 Podcast Script Welcome back to Quantum Computing 101. I'm Leo, and today we're diving into something that genuinely excited me this week. Just days ago, IBM researchers pulled off something remarkable—they created a molecule that had never existed before, and here's the kicker: they needed a quantum computer to prove why it worked. Picture this. Scientists assembled a molecule called C13Cl2 atom by atom, creating an electronic structure that twists like a corkscrew through space. It's called half-Möbius topology—electrons spiraling through the molecule in a pattern that fundamentally changes its chemistry. A decade ago, classical computers could simulate exactly sixteen electrons. Today, we've pushed that to eighteen. But with quantum computers? We explored thirty-two electrons simultaneously. That's the leap we're talking about. Here's where hybrid computing becomes the real hero. Classical computers are brilliant at organizing information, running algorithms, managing workflows. They excel at precision and speed in traditional calculations. But electrons don't work that way. They exist in quantum superposition, entangled states where each electron influences every other electron simultaneously. Classical computers drown in that complexity—the calculations grow exponentially until the machine just surrenders. Quantum computers speak the same language as electrons. They're built from qubits, quantum objects that mirror the behavior they're trying to understand. It's like asking a classical computer to describe a symphony by counting individual sound waves, versus asking a quantum computer that naturally resonates at those frequencies. But here's the elegant part about hybrid systems. You don't throw out the classical computer. In this IBM experiment, the quantum processor handled the deeply entangled electron simulations, revealing the helical molecular orbitals that proved the half-Möbius structure existed. Meanwhile, classical systems orchestrated the workflow, processed the data, and provided the computational framework. Together, they solved something neither could achieve alone. Across the Pacific, the story repeats. Japan and Singapore just signed a three-year partnership focused on hybrid quantum-HPC platforms. RIKEN's supercomputer Fugaku now links with quantum systems through carefully designed middleware. Quantinuum integrated their trapped-ion quantum computer with classical supercomputers, achieving error-corrected simulations that were thought years away. They're even using NVIDIA GPUs in real-time quantum error correction, improving logical qubit fidelity by more than three percent. This is the pattern emerging in 2026. We're past the era of quantum computers as isolated experiments. They're becoming embedded in existing research infrastructure, integrated with classical and AI-accelerated systems. Quantum handles what's inherently quantum. Classical handles This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

Fler avsnitt av Quantum Computing 101

Visa alla avsnitt av Quantum Computing 101

Quantum Computing 101 med Inception Point AI finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.