Researchers develop molecular qubits that communicate at telecom frequencies(chicagoquantum.org)
chicagoquantum.org
Researchers develop molecular qubits that communicate at telecom frequencies
https://chicagoquantum.org/news/researchers-develop-molecular-qubits-communicate-telecom-frequencies
9 comments
Firstly, bravo on your field's publication.
Secondly, condolences for Ryan Murphy for all involved.
Can these erbium qubits be entangled over fiber, controlled by a quantum processor?
Secondly, condolences for Ryan Murphy for all involved.
Can these erbium qubits be entangled over fiber, controlled by a quantum processor?
I mean I guess that's the pitch - lots of stuff not yet demonstrated though
Speaking to people in the know a little while ago, the main barrier to scaling up quantum computation by interconnecting separate devices was that you couldn't run a quantum network at a high enough bandwidth to be useful. You just couldn't generate coupled states fast enough.
Assuming I've not entirely butchered the interpretation, does this help with that? It sounds to me like the transmission is at a useful frequency, but that says nothing about the bandwidth you can practically achieve.
Assuming I've not entirely butchered the interpretation, does this help with that? It sounds to me like the transmission is at a useful frequency, but that says nothing about the bandwidth you can practically achieve.
I really thought they were making up the name 'erbium'. I've been away from a periodic table too long..
Ytterbium, Yttrium, Terbium, and Erbium were all named after a village in Sweden that had a mine: Ytterby
We are happy that Rbium didn't become the next name of choice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ytterby
The mine closed down long ago. Today, it's a relatively expensive location for villas.
We are happy that Rbium didn't become the next name of choice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ytterby
The mine closed down long ago. Today, it's a relatively expensive location for villas.
Grew up there! Always feelt so strange that those were named after where I grew up.
You should make a separate HN post about this :-)
[1]: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09417-w