With cyberattacks on the rise, organizations are already bracing for devastating quantum hacks – CNBC

Amidst the houses and the car parks sits GCHQ, the Government Communications Headquarters, in this aerial photo taken on October 10, 2005.

David Goddard | Getty Images

LONDON A little-known U.K. company called Arqit is quietly preparing businesses and governments for what it sees as the next big threat to their cyber defenses: quantum computers.

It's still an incredibly young field of research, however some in the tech industry including the likes of Google, Microsoft and IBM believe quantum computing will become a reality in the next decade. And that could be worrying news for organizations' cyber security.

David Williams, co-founder and chairman of Arqit, says quantum computers will be several millions of times faster than classical computers, and would be able to break into one of the most widely-used methods of cryptography.

"The legacy encryption that we all use to keep our secrets safe is called PKI," or public-key infrastructure, Williams told CNBC in an interview. "It was invented in the 70s."

"PKI was originally designed to secure the communications of two computers," Williams added. "It wasn't designed for a hyper-connected world where there are a billion devices all over the world communicating in a complex round of interactions."

Arqit, which is planning to go public via a merger with a blank-check company, counts the likes of BT, Sumitomo Corporation, the British government and the European Space Agency as customers. Some of its team previously worked for GCHQ, the U.K. intelligence agency. The firm only recently came out of "stealth mode" a temporary state of secretness and its stock market listing couldn't be more timely.

The past month has seen a spate of devastating ransomware attacks on organizations from Colonial Pipeline, the largest fuel pipeline in the U.S., to JBS, the world's largest meatpacker.

Microsoft and several U.S. government agencies, meanwhile, were among those affected by an attack on IT firm SolarWinds. President Joe Biden recently signed an executive order aimed at ramping up U.S. cyber defenses.

Quantum computing aims to apply the principles of quantum physics a body of science that seeks to describe the world at the level of atoms and subatomic particles to computers.

Whereas today's computers use ones and zeroes to store information, a quantum computer relies on quantum bits, or qubits, which can consist of a combination of ones and zeroes simultaneously, something that's known in the field as superposition. These qubits can also be linked together through a phenomenon called entanglement.

Put simply, it means quantum computers are far more powerful than today's machines and are able to solve complex calculations much faster.

Kasper Rasmussen, associate professor of computer science at the University of Oxford, told CNBC that quantum computers are designed to do "certain very specific operations much faster than classical computers."

That it is not to say they'll be able to solve every task. "This is not a case of: 'This is a quantum computer, so it just runs whatever application you put on there much faster.' That's not the idea," Rasmussen said.

This could be a problem for modern encryption standards, according to experts.

"When you and I use PKI encryption, we do halves of a difficult math problem: prime factorisation," Williams told CNBC. "You give me a number and I work out what are the prime numbers to work out the new number. A classic computer can't break that but a quantum computer will."

Williams believes his company has found the solution. Instead of relying on public-key cryptography, Arqit sends out symmetric encryption keys long, random numbers via satellites, something it calls "quantum key distribution." Virgin Orbit, which invested in Arqit as part of its SPAC deal, plans to launch the satellites from Cornwall, England, by 2023.

Some experts say it will take some time before quantum computers finally arrive in a way that could pose a threat to existing cyber defenses. Rasmussen doesn't expect them to exist in any meaningful way for at least another 10 years. But he's not complacent.

"If we accept the fact that quantum computers will exist in 10 years, anyone with the foresight to record important conversations now might be in a position to decrypt them when quantum computers come about," Rasmussen said.

"Public-key cryptography is literally everywhere in our digitized world, from your bank card, to the way you connect to the internet, to your car key, to IOT (internet of things) devices," Ali Kaafarani, CEO and founder of cybersecurity start-up PQShield, told CNBC.

The U.S. Commerce Department's National Institute of Standards and Technology is looking to update its standards on cryptography to include what's known as post-quantum cryptography, algorithms that could be secure against an attack from a quantum computer.

Kaafarani expects NIST will decide on new standards by the end of 2021. But, he warns: "For me, the challenge is not the quantum threat and how can we build encryption methods that are secure. We solved that."

"The challenge now is how businesses need to prepare for the transition to the new standards," Kaafarani said. "Lessons from the past prove that it's too slow and takes years and decades to switch from one algorithm to another."

Williams thinks firms need to be ready now, adding that forming post-quantum algorithms that take public-key cryptography and make it "even more complex" are not the solution. He alluded to a report from NIST which noted challenges with post-quantum cryptographic solutions.

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With cyberattacks on the rise, organizations are already bracing for devastating quantum hacks - CNBC

In Quantum Physics, Everything Is Relative – The New York Times

The conceptual breakthrough initiated by Heisenberg (who was mentored by Niels Bohr), and firmed up with contributions from Max Born, Wolfgang Pauli, Paul Dirac, Erwin Schrdinger and others, makes it clear that the world of the very small that of photons, electrons, atoms and molecules obeys rules that go against the grain of our everyday physical reality.

Take an electron that is emitted at Point A and is detected at Point B. One would assume that the electron follows a trajectory, the way a baseball does from a pitchers hand to a catchers mitt. To explain experimental observations, Heisenberg rejected the notion of a trajectory for the electron. The resulting quantum theory deals in probabilities. It lets you calculate the probability of finding the electron at Point B. It says nothing of the path the electron takes. In its most austere form, quantum theory even denies any reality to the electron until it is detected (leading some to posit that a conscious observer somehow creates reality).

Since the 1950s, scientists have tried to make quantum theory conform to the dictates of classical physics, including arguing for a hidden reality in which the electron does have a trajectory, or suggesting that the electron takes every possible path, but these paths are manifest in different worlds. Rovelli dismisses these attempts. The cost of these approaches is to postulate a world full of invisible things.

Instead, in Helgoland Rovelli explains his relational interpretation, in which an electron, say, has properties only when it interacts with something else. When its not interacting, the electron is devoid of physical properties: no position, no velocity, no trajectory. Even more radical is Rovellis claim that the electrons properties are real only for the object its interacting with and not for other objects. The world fractures into a play of points of view that do not admit of a univocal, global vision, Rovelli writes. Or, as he puts it, Facts are relative. Its a dramatic denunciation of physics as a discipline that provides an objective, third-person description of reality.

This perspective blurs the distinction between mental and physical phenomena. Both are products of interactions between parts of the physical world, Rovelli says. In arguing that the mind is itself the outcome of a complex web of interactions, Rovelli takes on dualists who distinguish between the mental and the physical and nave materialists who say that everything begins with particles of matter with well-defined properties.

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In Quantum Physics, Everything Is Relative - The New York Times

CU Boulder the site of 53-year-old report on UFOs. What do the findings say? – CU Boulder Today

Later this month, U.S. intelligence agencies are expected to present to Congress a highly anticipated unclassified report detailing what they know about unidentified flying objects (UFOs).

According to unnamed officials reported to have been briefed on its contents, the task forcedid not find evidence that the unexplained aerial phenomena (likened to UFOs) that Navy pilots have witnessed in recent years are alien spacecrafts. But the report does not definitively say they aren't.

One of the last government-commissioned reports on UFOs was conducted right here at CU Boulder and resides in the archives at University Libraries. Edward Condon, a former professor of physics and astrophysics, was given $300,000 to produce a thousand-page report named The Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects,or the Condon Report, as it became known.

Heather Bowden, head of Rare and Distinctive Collections, has preserved and reviewed the Condon Reportand spoke with CU Boulder Today about what it found.

Head of Rare and Distinctive Collections Heather Bowden

Edward U. Condon (190274), a former professor of physics and astrophysics and fellow of the Joint Institute of Laboratory Astrophysics (JILA), was a prominent theoretical physicist who made substantial contributions in academia, industry and government. He had a major impact in the development of scientific fields such as quantum mechanics, nuclear science and electronicsbut was most known for his report on UFOs.

The Condon Report was commissioned by the United States Air Force in the mid-1960s with the aim of producing an unbiased scientific investigation into the possibility that unidentified flying objects may be of extraterrestrial origin. The decision to conduct the study came from a March 1966 report from an ad hoc committee of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board tasked with reviewing this issue.

The collection contains documents, journals, research papers, international newsletters, film reels of suspected sightings and books gathered during Condon's commissioned study.

In the first section, Condon reported, Our general conclusion is that nothing has come from the study of UFOs in the past 21 years that has added to science knowledge, meaning the researchers involved in the project did not find conclusive evidence there have been sightings of UFOs that were crafted by remote galactic or intergalactic civilizations.

The 2021 government-commissioned UFO report came to a similar conclusion, according to unnamed sources cited in articles from The New York Times and CNN, but did not rule out the possibility that alien life exists.

How studying UFOs could lead to new scientific breakthroughs

This month, a Pentagon task force will release a long-awaited report digging into a topic typically relegated to science fiction movies and tabloids: unidentified flying objects. Professor Carol Cleland talks about the report and why scientists should take weird and mysterious observations seriously.

Im always most fascinated by the handwritten materials and scraps of notes that accompany published pieces like the report, because it lends a human element to something that could otherwise be considered clinical and dry.I also think the film reels would be fascinating to watch.

Students can access materials from the collection when Norlin Library reopens this fall by contacting rad@colorado.edu to schedule an appointment in the Rare and Distinctive Collections (RaD) Reading Room. Students can also check out additional UFO-related University Libraries resources online.

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CU Boulder the site of 53-year-old report on UFOs. What do the findings say? - CU Boulder Today

British innovation will be key to success of merger dubbed the ‘Apple of quantum computing’ – Sky News

Quantum computing is one of those technologies that, like artificial intelligence, has been attracting the interest of investors for some time - even though few can actually explain what it involves.

The technology, put very simply, involves harnessing quantum physics - the branch of the science that seeks to describe and explain how and why objects behave and move in the way that they do - to store data or perform computations to a vastly more efficient degree than traditional computers.

Quantum computers are said to be able to operate millions of times faster than existing ones.

A number of governments around the world are pumping capital into the sector in the hope of establishing a lead in the field. They include Germany which, in June last year, announced a 2bn (1.7bn) investment into two new quantum computers.

China, meanwhile, is setting up a national laboratory for quantum information sciences.

But the technology has also been the topic of much debate in investment circles.

Supporters believe it has the potential to transform many industries and sectors, including genetic medicine, pharmacology, financial services and materials development.

Sceptics argue that its vast potential may take many years, if ever, to be realised.

Wednesday, however, brought news of a deal that suggests quantum computing may indeed be on the verge of a breakthrough that could see it being applied more widely across business and industry.

Cambridge Quantum Computing, a British business founded in 2014, announced it is to combine with the quantum solutions arm of the US industrial giant Honeywell.

The pair said the combined business would be "extremely well-positioned to lead the quantum computing industry by offering advanced, fully integrated hardware and software solutions at an unprecedented pace, scale and level of performance to large high-growth markets worldwide".

Honeywell will be the majority shareholder of the new company, with CQ's shareholders, including Ilyas Khan, its founder and chief executive, owning just over 45% of the business.

Mr Khan said that he believed a breakthrough in the quantum computing had already arrived.

He told Sky News: "I think the tipping point was probably in the last 18 months. China, the United States, the United Kingdom, of course, have major programmes and lots of countries and companies have said that they face an existential risk if they don't get quantum computing right.

"In terms of applications, things that we will use on a day to day basis, I think a good analogy is mobile phones - at the end of the 1980s, before they arrived, nobody really knew that they're going to use them and of course, when they did arrive, the markets and their usage exploded.

"I would imagine that later on this year things like cyber security, for example, will be offering unhackable keys using the quantum computer, and it will begin to be more and more useful. Maybe the more esoteric uses are probably a couple of years away, machine learning, for example, [or] material discovery."

He said the combined business would be a "global powerhouse" capable of creating and commercialising quantum solutions that address "some of humanity's greatest challenges".

British tech start-ups are often accused of selling out too early but Mr Khan, who will lead the combined business, could not be described as such.

He added: "The UK is the leader in quantum and this is the first time since the Second World War that a major technology initiative is not being driven by Silicon Valley. We are a software and an algorithm provider and the merger creates an integrated business.

"[It will be] what I would describe as an Anglo American, actually a global business. The characterisation of a sell-out, I think, is probably not one I would agree with."

Honeywell will be investing between $270m (190m) and $300m (211m) in the new venture and Mr Khan said this money would be invested, predominantly, in people.

At the start of its life, the enlarged business will be employing around 350 people, of whom 200 are scientists - more than half of them boasting doctorates in disciplines such as chemistry, physics and maths.

Mr Khan went on: "This is a business where we are in scaling and growth mode - so it's primarily people. We will probably grow quite rapidly as far as the numbers are concerned, both in the United Kingdom, and in the United States, and then a reasonable amount of that capital will be in continuing to increase the capacity of the quantum computers. We have the world's best performing computer right now - and we will be deploying that for customer usage over the course of the next few years."

Hinting at a forthcoming stock market flotation of the business, Mr Khan said there would also be a fund-raising at some point in the near future, in which outside investors would be able to buy a stake in the business.

He declined to say what valuation had been put on Cambridge Quantum under the transaction but said some numbers would be released "over the course of the next week or two".

Mr Khan went on: "This is something which is obviously something that I'm very proud of. It's a British winner. The United Kingdom is the leader in this. We are the world's leader and, of course, consequently very valuable."

That reluctance to talk specific numbers is, perhaps, understandable.

Barron's, the influential US financial publication, has already suggested that the enlarged business could be the 'Apple of quantum computing' because the deal brings together Honeywell's expertise in quantum hardware with Cambridge Quantum's expertise in software and algorithms - emulating the way Apple straddles hardware, operating systems, and software applications. Honeywell itself has said that quantum computing will one day be a trillion dollar-a-year industry.

The deal marks another twist in what has been an inspiring story.

Born in Haslingden, in Lancashire, Mr Khan's father was a bus driver and he was brought up in what he told the Lancashire Telegraph in 2009 was a "two up, two down terrace". Educated at Haslingden Grammar School and University of London School of Oriental and African Studies, he want into banking on graduating, spending 20 years of his career in Hong Kong.

He first came to public attention when, in 2009, he rescued Accrington Stanley FC and later served as its chairman for three years. He has reportedly sunk more than 2m of his own money into the club over a 20-year period.

On returning to the UK he joined the University of Cambridge's Judge Business School and chairman of the Stephen Hawking Foundation and it was a comment from the late Professor Hawking, a friend, who prompted him to start Cambridge Quantum.

He told The Quantum Daily last year: "The prompt really came from a comment that Stephen made to me in a meeting that we were attending and Stephen said 'this is for real'. This really opened my eyes."

It is just possible that those investors still sceptical about quantum computing may well have had their eyes opened, too, following this deal.

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British innovation will be key to success of merger dubbed the 'Apple of quantum computing' - Sky News

Spintronics: what you need to know about electron control – Verdict

Spintronics has already had profound impact on the computing industry and there is more to come.

The electron is a subatomic particle that plays an essential role in numerous physical phenomena like electricity and magnetism. It has been responsible for much of the technological marvels we see today.

Computers, reliant on the movement of electrons and their intrinsic charge, have ushered in a new era of innovation and societal development. However, as computers become small enough to fit on our wrists, quantum mechanics (the rules which govern subatomic physics) will soon prevent chips from getting any smaller.

The presence of electrons, and hence charge, on one side of a transistor (a semiconductor device which amplifies electric current) acts as something of an on switch representing a 1 and the lack of electrons represents a 0. But electrons dont really like staying in one place. They jump around. Soon, transistors will be so small that this becomes a problem.

Thankfully, electrons have another property that we can exploit. Its called spin, and manipulating electron spins could pave the way to the next generation of nanoelectronic devices.

Reduced power consumption, increased memory capacity, and improved processing capability can all be realised in applications from medicine to space research, with the aid of spintronics spin electronics.

What is spin?

Spin is a confusing area of physics but the essence of it is this: imagine the electron as a tiny bar magnet, with north pointing one way, and south the other. If the north side points up, it is a spin up electron, and if north points down it is spin down. This has nothing to do with the electron spinning like a billiard ball physicists do have a penchant for giving things confusing names.

What does this mean for our devices? Well, spin can be used to change how electrons flow which gives us more control.

Dr Amalio Fernandez-Pacheco, an EPSRC Early Career Fellow in the University of Glasgows School of Physics and Astronomy, describes it as like being given an extra note in a musical scale to play with.

Why does spintronics matter?

Giant magnetoresistance (GMR) is a spintronic effect whereby electric current can flow between layers of magnetic and non-magnetic material, depending on the spins of the magnetic layers. The 2007 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to Albert Fert and Peter Grnberg for its discovery.

GMR is at the heart of todays read heads for hard disk drives (HDDs), which manipulate the structure of the disk to store information. GMR-based read heads were introduced by IBM in 1997 and led to an increase in information density by a factor of 1000.

Random access memory (RAM), hardware that stores data temporarily, can usually only hold onto data if there is an electric current supplied. Magnetic RAM (MRAM) has been in development over the past ten years, which uses spintronic effects to allow data storage without the supply of electricity. MRAM can resist high temperatures and radiation, which has led to applications in space research and a potential future in the automotive industry.

Spintronics is set to play a key role in the development of neuromorphic computing, which aims to create artificial circuits that mimic the structure of the brain. Quantum computers, which could speed up calculations of certain tasks by orders of magnitude, can also be spin-based.

The study of spintronics encompasses a wide variety of applications and has so far proved successful in areas such as HDDs. It is the subject of intense study, and those in the tech industry should expect more spin-based revolutions in the years to come.Related Report Download the full report from GlobalData's Report StoreGet the Report

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Spintronics: what you need to know about electron control - Verdict

What happened before the Big Bang? – Big Think

Let's face it: to think that the universe has a history that started with a kind of birthday some 13.8 billion years ago is weird. It resonates with many religious narratives that posit that the cosmos was created by divine intervention, although science has nothing to say about that.

If everything that happens can be attributed to a cause, what caused the universe? To deal with the very tough question of the First Cause, religious creation myths use what cultural anthropologists sometimes call a "Positive Being," a supernatural entity. Since time itself had a beginning at some point in the distant past, that First Cause had to be special: it had to be an uncaused cause, a cause that just happened, with nothing preceding it.

Attributing the beginning of everything to the Big Bang begs the question, "What happened before that?" That's a different question when we are dealing with eternal gods, as for them, timelessness is not an issue. They exist outside of time, but we don't. For us, there is no "before" time. Thus, if you ask what was going on before the Big Bang, the question is somewhat meaningless, even if we need it to make sense. Stephen Hawking once equated it with asking, "What's north of the North Pole?" Or, the way I like to phrase it, "Who were you before you were born?"

Saint Augustine posited that time and space emerged with creation. For him, it was an act of God, of course. But for science?

Scientifically, we try to figure out the way the universe was in its adolescence and infancy by going backward in time, trying to reconstruct what was happening. Somewhat like paleontologists, we identify "fossils" material remnants of long-ago days and use them to learn about the different physics that was prevalent then.

The premise is that we are confident that the universe is expanding now and has been for billions of years. "Expansion" here means that the distances between galaxies are increasing; galaxies are receding from one another at a rate that depends on what was inside the universe at different eras, that is, the kinds of stuff that fill up space.

When we mention the Big Bang and expansion, it's hard not to think about an explosion that started everything. Especially since we call it the "Big Bang." But that's the wrong way to think about it. Galaxies move away from one another because they are literally carried by the stretch of space itself. Like an elastic fabric, space stretches out and the galaxies are carried along, like corks floating down a river. So, galaxies are not like pieces of shrapnel flying away from a central explosion. There is no central explosion. The universe expands in all directions and is perfectly democratic: every point is equally important. Someone in a faraway galaxy would see other galaxies moving away just like we do.

(Side note: For galaxies that are close enough to us, there are deviations from this cosmic flow, what's called "local motion." This is due to gravity, The Andromeda galaxy is moving toward us, for example.)

Credit: Andrea Danti / 98473600 via Adobe Stock

Playing the cosmic movie backward, we see matter getting squeezed more and more into a shrinking volume of space. Temperature rises, pressure rises, things break apart. Molecules get broken down into atoms, atoms into nuclei and electrons, atomic nuclei into protons and neutrons, and then protons and neutrons into their constituent quarks. This progressive dismantling of matter into its most basic constituents happens as the clock ticks backward toward the "bang" itself.

For example, hydrogen atoms dissociate at about 400,000 years after the Big Bang, atomic nuclei at about one minute, and protons and neutrons at about one-hundredth of a second. How do we know? We have found the radiation left over from when the first atoms formed (the cosmic microwave background radiation) and discovered how the first light atomic nuclei were made when the universe was merely a few minutes old. These are the cosmic fossils that show us the way backward.

Currently, our experiments can simulate conditions that happened when the universe was roughly one trillionth of a second old. That seems like a ridiculously small number for us, but for a photon a particle of light it's a long time, allowing it to travel the diameter of a proton a trillion times. When talking about the early universe, we must let go of our human standards and intuitions of time.

We want to keep going back as close to t = 0 as possible, of course. But eventually we hit a wall of ignorance, and all we can do is extrapolate our current theories, hoping that they will give us some hints of what was going on much earlier, at energies and temperatures we cannot test in the lab. One thing we do know for certain, that really close to t = 0, our current theory describing the properties of space and time, Einstein's general theory of relativity, breaks down.

This is the realm of quantum mechanics, where distances are so tiny that we must rethink space not as a continuous sheet but as a granular environment. Unfortunately, we don't have a good theory to describe this granularity of space or the physics of gravity at the quantum scale (known as quantum gravity). There are candidates, of course, like superstring theory and loop quantum gravity. But currently there is no evidence pointing toward either of the two as a viable description of physics.

Physics' greatest mystery: Michio Kaku explains the God Equation | Big Think http://www.youtube.com

Still, our curiosity insists on pushing the boundaries toward t = 0. What can we say? In the 1980s, James Hartle and Stephen Hawking, Alex Vilenkin, and Andrei Linde separately came up with three models of quantum cosmology, where the whole universe is treated like an atom, with an equation similar to the one used in quantum mechanics. In this equation, the universe would be a wave of probability that essentially links a quantum realm with no time to a classical one with time i.e., the universe we inhabit, now expanding. The transition from quantum to classical would be the literal emergence of the cosmos, what we call the Big Bang being an uncaused quantum fluctuation as random as radioactive decay: from no time to time.

If we assume that one of these simple models is correct, would that be the scientific explanation for the First Cause? Could we just do away with the need for a cause altogether using the probabilities of quantum physics?

Unfortunately, not. Sure, such a model would be an amazing intellectual feat. It would constitute a tremendous advance in understanding the origin of all things. But it's not good enough. Science can't happen in a vacuum. It needs a conceptual framework to operate, things like space, time, matter, energy, calculus, and conservation laws of quantities like energy and momentum. One can't build a skyscraper out of ideas, and one can't build models without concepts and laws. To ask from science to "explain" the First Cause is to ask science to explain its own structure. It's to ask for a scientific model that uses no precedents, no previous concepts to operate. And science can't do this, just as you can't think without a brain.

The mystery of the First Cause remains. You can choose religious faith as an answer, or you can choose to believe science will conquer it all. But you can also, like the Greek Skeptic Pyrrho, embrace the limits of our reach into the unknowable with humility, celebrating what we have accomplished and will surely keep on accomplishing, without the need to know all and understand all. It's okay to be left wondering.

Curiosity without mystery is blind, and mystery without curiosity is lame.

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What happened before the Big Bang? - Big Think

Is This a Real Science Textbook Introduction? – Snopes.com

Advanced science textbooks are not generally known for their jocularity, but a purported image showing the introductory sentences from one such work is downright gloomy:

This chapter on Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics opens, according to the displayed snippet, by discouragingly informing readers that Ludwig Boltzmann, who spent much of his life studying statistical mechanics, died in 1906, by his own hand. Paul Ehrenfest, carrying on his work, died similarly in 1933. Now it is our turn to study statistical mechanics. Perhaps it will be wise to approach the subject cautiously.

These words do in fact form the beginning of the first chapter of the book States of Matter, a text by CalTech physicist David L. Goodstein, as documented by the following extract from a digital copy of the book:

For the curious, Boltzmann was an Austrian physicist whose greatest achievements were the development of statistical mechanics, and the statistical explanation of the second law of thermodynamics and whose efforts radically changed several branches of physics. Boltzmann, who is thought to have experienced bipolar disorder, hanged himself while on vacation in Italy in 1906.

Boltzmann was the doctoral adviser of Austrian/Dutch theoretical physicist Ehrenfest, the latter of whom made major contributions to the field of statistical mechanics and its relations with quantum mechanics. Apparently suffering from depression, in 1933 Ehrenfest traveled to Amsterdam, where he shot his 15-year-old son (a Down syndrome child who was living in a care facility) and then killed himself.

Perhaps it will be wise to approach the subject cautiously, indeed.

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Is This a Real Science Textbook Introduction? - Snopes.com

What is an Electron: Its Discovery, Nature and Everything Else | IE – Interesting Engineering

An electron is a stable and negatively charged subatomic particle that also acts as the carrier of electricity. Each electron carries one unit of negative charge (1.602 x 10-19coulomb) and has a mass of just about 1/1836th of a proton.Electrons are found both not permanently attached to atoms andwithin the nucleus.

Quantum mechanics states that electrons can not be distinguished on the basis of any intrinsic property, so all electrons have thesamemass, thesameelectric charge, and thesamespin, so they can freely interchange their positions within a system without causing a noticeable change.

The possibility of electrons was predicted by Richard Laming (1838-1851), and other scientists.Irish physicistG. Johnstone Stoney(1874) coined the term electron in 1891, to refer to the unit of charge in his experiments. In 1897, English physicist Joseph John Thomson discovered electrons while conducting experiments with cathode-ray tubes. He called electrons "corpuscles".

Thomsondirected cathode rays between two parallelaluminumplates to the end of a tube, where they could be observed as luminescence on the glass. When the top aluminum plate was negative, the rays moved down; when the top plate was positive, the rays moved up. This deflection was proportional to the difference in potential between the plates, demonstrating that cathode rays were negatively charged particles.

From this,Thomson made the following hypotheses:

Today, we know that the third hypothesis is not accurate, but this discovery of the electron revolutionized physics and paved the way for developments concerning electricity, gravitation, electromagnetism, thermal conductivity, and many other areas. For his work, Thomson was awarded the 1906 Nobel Prize in Physics.

Prior to Thomson, scientists such as Richard Fleming had previously predicted the possible existence of electrons. The ancient Greeks are said to have discovered that when amber is rubbed with fur, it attracts small objects. The Greek word for amber,elektronwas used for the force that caused this attraction.

Protons and electrons have equal, but opposite charges. Electrons are attracted to positively charged particles, such as protons. Whether or not a substance has a net electric charge is determined by the balance between the number of electrons and the positive charge of atomic nuclei. If there are more electrons than positive charges, a material is said to be negatively charged. If there is an excess of protons, the object is considered to be positively charged. If the number of electrons and protons is balanced, a material is said to be electrically neutral.

The radius of an electron is approximately 2 x 10-10cm.Neutrons and protons, together known as nucleons, form 99.9% of the total atomic massof an atom, and as compared to these particles, electrons have negligible mass value, therefore, the mass of electrons is not considered when the mass number of an atom is calculated.

The symbol for an electron is e and for proton is p+ but, interestingly, protons are not the true antiparticles to electrons. The antiparticle of the electron is the positron, whichhas an electric charge of +1 e, a spin of 1/2 (the same as the electron), and has the same mass as an electron.

Positronsare not found in nature but are formed during the decay of nuclides that have an excess of protons in their nucleus. When decaying takes place, these radionuclides emit apositronand a neutrino.

For any element, the atomic mass number is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus. It is measured in the atomic mass units (amu).

Atomic Mass Number = (Number of Protons) + (Number of Neutrons)

Whereas, the atomic number is the number of protons only. For example, the atomic number of carbon is six, therefore, carbon has six protons in its nucleus and six electrons in the energy orbits surrounding the nucleus.

Electrons are described as surrounding the nucleus of an atom in shells. These are not actual structures but are regions of probability.

Atomic Number = Number of Protons

However, in the case of charged atoms also known as ions, the number of protons and electrons differ and depends on the charge on the atom. The number of neutrons for an atom can be easily calculated by subtracting the number of protons from the total atomic mass number.

Number of Neutrons = Atomic Mass Number - Number of Protons

The nature of the electric charge on any substance is defined by the number of protons and electrons in its nuclei. If the number of protons exceeds the number of electrons, then the substance is positively charged. Where there are more electrons than protons, the substance is said to have an overall negative charge. Any substance is said to be balanced or electrically neutral when the number of protons and electrons is equal.

French physicist Louis De Broglie proposed the wave nature of electrons in his 1924 Ph.D. thesis. He stated that if light and radiation can show dual behavior, then the matter can also exist as both particle and wave.

De Broglie was influenced byAlbert Einsteins theory of relativity and the photoelectric effect. Twenty years earlier, Einstein has proposedthe idea that matter on the atomic scale might exhibit the properties of a wave and a particle.This idea of the dual nature of light was just beginning to gain scientific acceptance when de Broglie extended the idea to include matter.

According to De Broglies hypothesis, any moving object, whether macroscopic or microscopic has its own wavelength, and this wavelength is inversely proportional to the size of the object.

In the years that followed, the American physicists, Clinton Davisson and Lester Germer conducted electron diffraction experiments that further confirmed the dual nature of matter given by De Broglie. In 1929, De Broglie received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his exceptional contribution to quantum physics.

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What is an Electron: Its Discovery, Nature and Everything Else | IE - Interesting Engineering

Exploring The Limitations of Quantum Machine Learning – Analytics India Magazine

In Quantum computing, users can physically control parameters like Electromagnetic fields strength, frequency of a laser pulse, or others to solve problems. Thus, Quantum computers can be trained like neural networks. The biggest advantage of quantum computers is that they can produce patterns that classical systems are thought to have difficulties in producing. Therefore, its reasonable to assume that quantum computers may outperform classical computers on Machine Learning tasks. This has led to a new field called quantum machine learning.

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Quantum technologies can enhance learning algorithms. This is known as quantum-enhanced machine learning. The most common application of quantum computers in the field refers to machine learning algorithms for the analysis of data that couldnt be executed through classical computing.

Quantum Machine Learning increases the computation speed and can manage data storage done by algorithms in a programme. It extends the proof of learning by running machine learning algorithms on new computing devices- quantum computers. The information processing depends on quantum physics and its law, substantially different from computer models.

However, the field of Quantum Machine Learningrightfully still operates in the realms of science that is closer to fiction.The limitations are palpable.

Recent research at the Los Alamos National Laboratory showed that Quantum Machine Learning cannot be used to investigate processes like Quantum Chaos and terminalization. This places a big limit on the learning of any new process linked to it through Quantum computing. The study was based on a Hayden-Preskill thought experiment. A fictitious character Alice tosses her book inside the black hole.

The book was pulled out by Bob, who used entanglement to pull it out. Through any computation bringing the book back to its original state is impossible. Though the book was pulled out using quantum computing algorithms, the information was scrambled and no quantum machine learning model could unscramble the book back to its original state. The research also found out that Bob can unscramble the book by collecting a few photons from the black hole and learning its dynamics but the answer to that cannot be reached through Quantum Machine Learning.

The size of the system determines the scalability and the difficulty in problem-solving increases exponentially when the problem is complex or data is large. The research proves that though Quantum computing is the solution to problems it has its limitations and challenges due to its dependence on raw physics and the unadvanced nature of other technologies that help in the hardware and software development of quantum computers on which complex algorithms can be created and run.

The frequent challenge that troubles researchers is isolation. Quantum decoherence can be caused by heat and light, when subjected to such conditions qubits can lose their quantum properties like entanglement that further leads to a loss in data stored in these qubits. Secondly, rotations in quantum computers logic gates are prone to error and these are also crucial to change the state of the qubit. Any wrong rotation can cause an error in the output. The requirement of computers with a greater circuit length and error correction( with redundancy for every qubit) is also crucial for the field of quantum machine learning.

The developer of algorithms for Quantum computers has to be concerned about their physics. While a classical algorithm can be developed along the lines of the Turing machine, to develop an algorithm for Quantum computers, the developer has to base it along the lines of raw physics with no simple formulas that would link it to logic.

The critical issue in such a design is always scalability. Designing a program to operate on larger data with more processing power. Very little information is available to develop such algorithms for quantum computing. Most of the development is therefore intuitive. Most known Quantum algorithms suffer from a proviso of specific simulations that limit their practical applicability and it becomes difficult to develop models that can have a significant impact on machine learning. The third limitation in quantum computing is that the number of qubits one can have on a quantum circle is limited. Though these limitations are applicable to quantum computing in general, the augmentation of fields such as machine learning can grab more eyeballs and push the field in the right direction.

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Archer Materials CEO talks about importance of moving to Lot Fourteen as it develops 12CQ chip – Proactive Investors Australia

Lot Fourteen is a competitive and future industries-focused innovation precinct located in Adelaide.

() () (FRA:38A) CEO Dr Mohammad Choucair has sent a letter to investors outlining the importance of the companys move to the fledgling innovation precinct Lot Fourteen in Adelaide.

As reported by Proactive, Archer has relocated its head office to the Lot Fourteen innovation precinct in Adelaide, South Australia.

The company, which is hard at work developing its flagship 12CQ chip - a world-first qubit processor technology that will enable quantum computing-powered devices for mobile and data-centric applications - made the move to be closer to quantum computing end users.

Hardware and software firms working together at an early stage of technology development provides a foundation for success in the computing industry and our recent move to Lot Fourteen is a step in that direction, aligning us with quantum computing end users and potential collaborative partners, Dr Choucair said.

Lot Fourteen is focusing on the high-growth industries of space, defence and hi-tech, encompassing cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, machine learning and big data.

All of these high-growth industries could benefit from quantum computing and in some instances require integrated quantum processor hardware to reach their full potential.

We expect our 12CQ quantum processor chip technology to create entirely new quantum computing powered mobile devices that enable industry-wide innovation, and we are already actively working with global leaders in computing and AI to enable the operation of our 12CQ chip in high impact end-use applications.

Archer began collaborating with leading AI and machine learning company Max Kelsen in December last year, to develop quantum algorithms relevant to the operation of the 12CQ quantum computing processor.

It is currently working on optimising Quantum Neural Networks, which could be relevant to consumer and enterprise-scale AI technology products.

The company also passed a key technological milestone earlier this year, with electronic transport achieved in a single qubit at room temperature.

Archer also signed a quantum computing agreement with IBM Corporation () thatprogressesthe work conducted with IBM under a previous agreement.

There is an immense amount of value to be generated and captured from outperforming modern computing using mobile quantum devices, spanning autonomous tech, cybersecurity, AI and big data, blockchain, space, and finance, Dr Choucair said.

We continue to make significant progress in the development of our 12CQ quantum chip, and I look forward to updating you on key technical advances, international patent prosecution, and collaborations with local and international industry members of the deep tech ecosystem.

Quantum computing aims to utilise quantum mechanical phenomena to power the next generation of computers.

At a basic level, quantum mechanics describes the way nature and matter function at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. Thisis fundamentally different from the way they function at the many scales above that size (which is described by classical physics).

Functioning quantum computers remain a matter of theory at this point in time but, should they be successfully developed, it is hypothesised that they could solve computational problems substantially faster than existing computers.

- Daniel Paproth

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Archer Materials CEO talks about importance of moving to Lot Fourteen as it develops 12CQ chip - Proactive Investors Australia

How (and why) 8000 migrants breached the Spanish-Moroccan border and what it says about Europe’s migration crisis – America Magazine

When some 8,000 people breached the border of Ceuta in just 48 hours last month, Juan Vivas, the mayor-president of this autonomous Spanish city on the north coast of Africa, admitted on Spanish radio that he felt as if Ceuta were being overrun.

It is exactly this perception of the sudden crisis in the Spanish enclave that advocates fear will prove a setback to the protection of migrants in the much-traversed routes across Africa and the Mediterranean to Europe.

Surveying Mays events in Ceuta, there was a sense that [Ceuta was] being invaded, Jos Ignacio Garca, S.J., the regional director of Jesuit Refugee Service Europe, said. That is a public perception of migrants that he is convinced must be changed.

Morocco receives millions of dollars each year from Spain and the European Union to limit irregular migration, and the border of Ceuta is normally heavily guarded. The size of the May influx of would-be migrants at Ceuta was unprecedented, but it is not the first time Morocco has abruptly abandoned border controls.

Word had spread in mid-May that security on the Moroccan side would be loosened. Thousands of people headed for the border, ready to make a break for Europe. Moroccan officials were apparently using the migrants to signal their displeasure with a decision by Spain to allow Brahim Ghali, the leader of the Polaris Front, a West Saharan independence group, to enter Spain in April. He had traveled to Spain using a false name to receive treatment for Covid-19, but the secret operation was discovered by the press. Morocco claims sovereignty over West Sahara and demanded answers about Mr. Ghalis special treatment.

Though the Moroccan government has not admitted to intentionally opening the border, according to Father Garca and other migrant advocates, the flow of migrants is a tool that Morocco frequently deploys to pressure Spain.

From the Spanish side, they will always insist on the manipulation by the [Morocco] government. But he hastens to add that the root causes of migration from Africa to Europe go deeper than diplomatic spats between Morocco and Spain. Theres a strata of people that are very frustrated [by conditions in North Africa] and are going to try to cross, Father Garca said.

Many who live near the border have been especially suffering during the economic crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Border closures have hampered the informal economy that supports many Moroccans. Before the pandemic restrictions, Moroccans living in cities bordering Ceuta, like Fnidque, had previously been able to cross into the Spanish free port each day for work.

Before Covid, there had also been a significant economy in transporting goods by foot across the border. There are no taxes on goods carried into Morocco, and trucks are prohibited from crossing the border. That had provided an opportunity for thousands of day laborers, Father Garca explained, unloading trucks and carrying cargo on foot across the border. Even more work had been created on the Morroccan side in storing and selling those goods.

Many others who hope to make it to Europe head to Morocco from Africas Sahel region, just east and south of the Maghreb, which includes Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Niger. More than two million people from the region have been displaced by Islamic militants and criminal gangs.

Mays border opening was the opportunity thousands had been waiting for. But most who took advantage of the border opening had been returned within days by deportation or returned voluntarily to Morocco after it quickly became clear that there was little hope of making it any further into Europe.

As the crisis unfolded, Spanish authorities estimated that as many as 30 people a minute were crossing the border around midnight on May 18. Ceuta, a Spanish city perched on a small peninsula jutting into the Mediterranean and forming the southern side of the Strait of Gibraltar, encompasses a little over 7 square miles and includes 85,000 residents. Eight thousand new arrivals, two thousand of them unaccompanied minors, created a noticeable and potentially destabilizing presence.

The new arrivals came with just the clothes on their backs, many reaching Spain by swimming around the jetty that extends into the ocean along the border cutting across the beach between Ceuta and Morocco. Most of the impromptu migrants had no other immediate plan than to leave behind the poverty of Africa for a chance at a new life in Europe.

Spanish security forcesthe army, the local police and Civil Guard and even the Foreign Legionwere on hand to round up the irregular entrants, but government facilities and forces were soon overwhelmed, and many groups of migrants wandered through the city or hid in the community to avoid being taken into custody. Their hope was to find a way to Spain, often as stowaways in trucks that ferry across the strait.

In the ensuing chaos, many Ceutans kept their children home from school and businesses closed. But the churchs ministries to migrants, including Caritas and the diocesan ministry, Everyones Land, were running at full throttle to provide basic needs to the migrants. The Red Cross was also assisting. There were reports of altercations between immigrants and residents, but there were also demonstrations of solidarity among residents of Ceuta.

Nevertheless, the frustration in Ceuta was obvious on May 18 when Spains Prime Minister Pedro Snchez visited the city. His motorcade was met with jeers, protests and calls for his resignation.

Relations between Morocco and Spain are complex, fraught with clashing political and economic interests. Morocco claims sovereignty over Ceuta and another Spanish enclave, Melilla, though the port cities have been under Spanish rule since the 15th century. Spain and Morocco are competitors in agricultural sales, even as Spain has become reliant on labor fromMorocco to maintainits farming sector.

The United States has been drawing closer to Morocco, diminishing the political influence of Spain in the region. Morocco may have been emboldened, in fact, to ratchet up its ongoing dispute with Spain because of the recent U.S. support it has received.

The geopolitical situation is changing.U.S. support for Moroccan sovereignty over West Sahara was a boost to Morocco, said Alberto Ares, S.J., the auxiliary coordinator of the Jesuit Migrant Service in Spain.

In December 2020, as part of an Israeli peace agreement, the Abraham Accord, the outgoing Trump administration recognized Moroccan sovereignty over West Sahara while Morocco normalized its relations with Israel. President Joe Biden has also recognized Moroccan sovereignty over the disputed territory.

The new U.S. president has also not yet scheduled a courtesy call with Mr. Snchez. The United States considers Morocco a key military ally, and in October it renewed a defense cooperation agreement into 2030. Last year, the United States also sold Morocco an arsenal of drones, combat helicopters, fighter jets, tanks and ammunition.

Some analysts fear the United States new policy could in the end further destabilize the region. Since Spain ceded administration of its former protectorate in 1976, Moroccan authorities have been able to extend control over four-fifths of the country. The Polisario Front controls the disputed territory of the eastern fifth.

Other regional actors, including Algeria and Mauritania, do not support Moroccos territorial claims. Along with the United Nations and Spain, they support self-determination for the territory. A cease-fire between the Polisario Front and Morocco has been in place since 1991, but it appears tenuous. An incident involving Moroccan forces removing West Saharan protestors from a highway connecting Morocco to sub-Saharan Africa recently threatened to erupt into wider violence.

Fighters across the region may be drawn in, if the violence continues, as has happened for years in Libyas cascading internal and proxy wars, Andrew Lebovich, a fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations, wrote.

But it seems the Biden administration is supporting Moroccos claim over West Sahara carefully. Operation African Lion, an annual joint military exercise that started on June 7 includingmore than 7,000 troops spread throughout Morocco, Senegal, and Tunisia, will not reach into West Sahara as Morocco had originally hoped.

While this latest crisis in Ceuta has subsided, Father Garca knows that its underlying causes remain. The same factors that propelled Mays migrant incursion could provoke border crossings again at any time. He advocates the establishment and protection of safe migrant routes from North Africa into Europe and for temporary visas that would allow migrants safe passage to a chance at a new life within the European Union. But incidents like the May crisis make that proposal an even harder sell to the European public.

Josep Buades Fuster, S.J., the coordinator of SJM-Frontera Sur, was recently approached by Spains Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migration for advice on how to streamline the process for work visas and help unaccompanied minors in Spain as they reach adulthood. For many that can mean a loss of formal residency and possible deportation unless they are employed. That has become increasingly challenging as Spains unemployment rate reaches 16 percent.

Father Ares hopes all these challenges can be addressed while keeping a sense of compassion for the migrants looking for a better life.

Where the routes of entry [into Europe] are practically closed, people that are desperate find themselves obliged to use whatever route they can to get there, he said. Pope Francis has called us to put the person in the center and to look beyond [only] economic interests.

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How (and why) 8000 migrants breached the Spanish-Moroccan border and what it says about Europe's migration crisis - America Magazine

Harris, Under Fire at Home and Abroad, Touts Progress in Migrant Crisis Diplomacy – Newsweek

Vice President Kamala Harris is touting the Biden administration's progress on dealing with the influx of undocumented immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border amid criticism from within the U.S. and abroad.

Harris emphasized the "root causes" of migration during her two-day trip to Guatemala and Mexico. Mexican President Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador met with Harris for more than an hour on Tuesday but did not attend a press conference where the vice president said she was "optimistic about the potential for progress." During an interview with NBC's Lester Holt, which was taped in Guatemala on Monday and aired on Tuesday, Harris insisted that progress had already been made.

"I would suggest to you that we have seen progress already," Harris told Holt. "When we have 12 of the biggest corporations of America... I've convened them in my office and they have agreed to help us work on this issue. Success so far is the bringing together of community-based organizations, not only United States, but here in Guatemala."

"Today that was one of my meetings, with civil society leaders," she continued. "To let them know we see them. We understand their concerns about corruption and we also understand their role of leadership to help us, in terms of how we prioritize our work in this region."

Harris deflected a question that has been repeatedly asked by U.S. conservatives since President Joe Biden put her in charge of efforts to reduce migration, telling Holt that she did not "understand the point" of asking whether she planned to personally visit the Mexican border. She committed to a personal visit during Tuesday's press conference.

"Yes, I will [visit the border]," Harris said. "And I have before... I've spent a lot of time on the border, both going there physically and [being] aware of the issues. But the reality of it is that we need to prioritize what's happening at the border. And we have to prioritize why people are going to the border."

"When the President asked me to deal with this issue, it was about addressing the root causes of migration," added Harris. "And the root causes are based on the problems and the challenges that people are facing in countries like Guatemala, which is why I was there."

Harris received a mixed reception during her visit to Guatemala. A small group of protesters carried signs falsely claiming that former President Donald Trump "won" the 2020 election while urging her to "mind your own business" prior to her meeting with Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei.

One day before his meeting with Harris, Giammattei criticized the Biden administration's approach to the migration issue, telling CBS that "the coyotes here were organizing groups of children to take them to the United States" immediately after the new president promised to "reunite families" and "reunite children."

In March, Lpez Obrador said that the administration's approach had convinced migrants that it was "easier" to cross the border than during the Trump administration, implying that the perception helped increased profits for Mexican drug cartels and gangs involved in human smuggling. He said that the two countries shared "a common humanist vision" after meeting with Harris on Tuesday.

An initiative to combat human smuggling with partnerships between Mexican and U.S. law enforcement agencies was one of several bilateral agreements that Harris announced on Tuesday. Agreements were also made concerning efforts to address the root causes of migration in Central America, boosting the economy in Southern Mexico and increasing dialogue on economic and security issues.

While the Biden administration's immigration policies have received nearly constant criticism from U.S. conservatives, criticism has also come from the American left. Harris faced heavy backlash from prominent progressives after warning prospective migrants that they should "not come" to the border in Guatemala on Monday.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) described the vice president's comments as "disappointing" while criticizing American foreign policy in Latin America by saying that the U.S. "can't help set someone's house on fire and then blame them for fleeing." Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) accused Harris of promoting a "stay there and die" approach to immigration.

Newsweek reached out to the White House for comment.

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Harris, Under Fire at Home and Abroad, Touts Progress in Migrant Crisis Diplomacy - Newsweek

Spain-Morocco relationship in crisis as hospital visit sparks migration stand-off – The Irish Times

When a veteran Western Saharan rebel leader checked into a Spanish hospital in April to be treated for Covid-19, few could have anticipated the repercussions.

Brahim Ghali, the 71-year-old leader of the Polisario Front, arrived in the country reportedly under a false name and with an Algerian passport, with the Spanish authorities hoping to keep his stay quiet.

But barely seven weeks later he has been identified as the catalyst for a migrant crisis in the Spanish city of Ceuta and a war of words between Madrid and Rabat that threatens to derail decades of close co-operation.

In diplomatic terms, we are looking at the most delicate Spanish-Moroccan crisis since [] 1975, noted political commentator Joaqun Luna, who added that Madrid has everything to lose.

The Algeria-backed Polisario Front has been fighting against the Moroccan army for sovereignty of Western Sahara ever since Spain withdrew from the territory in 1976. As the organisations leader, Ghali, often pictured in battle fatigues and sunglasses, is a Moroccan public enemy.

After discovering that Spain had allowed him to enter the country and be treated in a hospital in Logroo, Rabat warned in early May that the decision would lead to consequences.

On May 17th and 18th, more than 8,000 migrants, most of them Moroccan, crossed the border into the Spanish city of Ceuta in the space of 36 hours. Ceuta is one of two Spanish enclaves next to Morocco the other is Melilla which have Europes only land borders with Africa.

Many migrants were able to swim around the tall border fence or float around it on rafts, while others even managed to cross on foot when the tide was low. At least one man drowned. The Moroccan police, who normally control the border tightly, did little to stop them, reinforcing the notion that this was a reprisal by the Moroccan authorities against Spain.

Ceuta is used to receiving a regular flow of migrants, but such a large number in such a short period was unprecedented. Spains Socialist Party prime minister, Pedro Snchez, deployed the military to the city, as industrial warehouses were converted into migrant stay centres.

We will not accept any kind of blackmail or questioning of our territorial integrity, said Spains defence minister, Margarita Robles, as she accused Morocco of violating international law. It was the most strident language Madrid had used to address Rabat in two decades.

The Moroccan government recalled its ambassador in Madrid and hit back in the escalating war of words.

Morocco rejects threats which are based on clichs from the past, was the response of foreign minister Nasser Bourita. Blackmail? Why would we do that? With what aim?

Morocco has frequently had clear aims in mind when using the border with Spains North African enclaves to exert pressure on Madrid or on the EU. In the past, these objectives have been economic or political, for example as leverage in agricultural or fishing negotiations.

But on one occasion, at least, it has appeared to be more personal. In 2014, the Spanish civil guard stopped Moroccos King Mohammed VI when he was jet-skiing off the shores of Ceuta, without realising who he was. In the days that followed, 1,200 migrants reached Spain from Morocco.

Morocco has two main tools which it tends to use [with Spain]: immigration and the threat of not co-operating when it comes to security and counter-terrorism, says Ignacio Cembrero, a journalist and author who covers North Africa.

This time, Moroccos agenda stretches beyond annoyance at Ghalis hospital treatment to the broader issue of Western Sahara.

In December, the outgoing Trump administration endorsed Moroccos claim to sovereignty of the territory, a huge boost for the North African nation.

That change of policy came in exchange for Morocco formalising diplomatic ties with Israel, an important development for Washington in the context of the Middle East. While it is not yet clear whether the Biden administration will maintain this new stance, it has emboldened Morocco.

That unilateral decision by Trump was euphorically celebrated by the Moroccan authorities and has led them to adopt a much more assertive attitude in their foreign relations, noted Haizam Amirah-Fernndez, senior analyst for the Mediterranean and Arab World at the Elcano Royal Institute.

Already this spring, Germany has felt the force of Moroccos new-found boldness, after pushing back against the US shift on Western Sahara. In May, Rabat recalled its ambassador in Berlin and accused Germany of a negative stance.

Germany and Spain, like the EU as a whole, take the UNs long-standing line that a referendum should be held in the territory. The refusal of other countries to follow the United Statess lead appears to have riled Rabat.

Spain has not changed its position in relation to its policy as a neighbour of Morocco nor has it changed its position with regard to [Western] Sahara, said deputy prime minister Carmen Calvo in the wake of the Ceuta migrant crisis.

Cembrero and others see the thousands of African migrants who travelled to the Canary Islands in the latter part of 2020 many of them drowning on the way as yet another example of Morocco exerting pressure, as it sought Washingtons support for its Western Sahara claim.

Meanwhile, the strife with Morocco has added a sour ingredient to Spains already vitriolic political arena.

The far-right, Islamophobic Vox party described the arrival of the migrants in Ceuta as an invasion. The partys leader, Santiago Abascal, was jeered as he tried to stage a rally in the city, whose population is finely balanced between people of European and North African descent.

Some on the right have blamed the recent events on Podemos, the junior partner in Spains leftist governing coalition, for its advocacy in the past of Saharawi self-determination.

Spain is always in a difficult position, because of the leverage Morocco has and the huge civil society support for Saharan independence, said Jacob Mundy, visiting fellow with the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Its hard to know if Morocco is operating from a position of insecurity or confidence, he added. Its probably both.

Brahim Ghali testified before a Spanish judge this week as part of an investigation into allegations of human rights abuses against the Polisario leader in North Africa. But he was not charged and was able to fly out of Spain, to Algeria.

The decision not to pursue action against Ghali has further irritated Morocco. But it is likely to be even more frustrated this summer, when the European Court of Justice is expected to invalidate the EUs inclusion of Western Sahara in its trade and fishery deals with Morocco.

In the meantime, Spain and the EU are hoping that the Ceuta migrant crisis is an anomaly rather than the shape of things to come.

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Spain-Morocco relationship in crisis as hospital visit sparks migration stand-off - The Irish Times

Gov. Abbott: Biden admin pressuring Texas to aid in its illegal immigration program – KXAN.com

AUSTIN (Nexstar) Texas and the federal government are trading barbs over Gov. Greg Abbotts border disaster declaration, the latest installment coming from the Republican Governor who said the federal government caused a humanitarian crisis and should take responsibility for care of migrant children being sheltered in the state.

Abbotts comments come following President Joe Bidens administration threatening action over the Governors recent disaster declaration. The Governors declaration calls on the Texas Health and Human Services Commission to end licenses for child care facilities involved in federal contracts to shelter or detain undocumented immigrants.

The Biden Administration is yet again pressuring Texas to aid its illegal immigration program and force our state to do its job, Abbott said in a statement Wednesday. Commandeering state resources to fulfill the federal governments responsibility is a violation of the U.S. Constitution.

President Bidens reckless open border policies created this humanitarian crisis and led to a 20-year record-high of migrants crossing our southern border, so it is the Biden Administrations responsibility to care for them, Abbott stated. The federal government caused this problem and should be solely responsible for the care of these children. No child will be uncared for. Texas will remain focused on doing our jobprotecting Texans.

The Republican Governor issued his disaster declaration last week in 34 counties along the states border with Mexico. He said it was in response to an ongoing surge of illegal immigration being neglected by the federal government.

His order authorizes all available state resources to assist state and local law enforcement to protect Texans from property damage, trespassing, smuggling and human trafficking.

The also order directs the Texas Commission on Jail Standards to work with border counties to expand capacity for detention and tells the Texas Health and Human Services Commission to end licenses for child care facilities involved in federal contracts to shelter or detain undocumented immigrants.

The latter is what prompted the response this week from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Congress has charged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) with responsibility for the care and custody of unaccompanied non-citizen children seeking refuge in the United States, HHS Deputy General Counsel Paul Rodriguez wrote in a letter to Abbott, the Texas Secretary of States office and the executive commissioner of Texas HHSC.

The letter asks the state to confirm by Thursday whether Texas intends to apply the proclamation to ORRs network of 52 state-licensed grantee care provider facilities operating in Texas, and if so, whether you are willing to grant an exception that would allow ORRs grantees to retain their licenses subject to the same standards applied to other child-care facilities that are not affiliated with the Federal government.

Although we prefer to resolve this matter amicably, in light of the legal issues outlined above, HHS is consulting the U.S. Department of Justice and intends to pursue whatever appropriate legal action is necessary to ensure the safety and wellbeing of the vulnerable youth that Congress entrusted to ORR, Rodriguez wrote.

Texas HHSC licenses General Residential Operations, according to a Texas HHSC spokesperson. Some of those operations contract with ORR, the spokesperson said.

Texas HHSC notified providers last week with information about the planned cut-off of licensing.

The federal government has co-opted the state government to be involved in that licensing process, which is commandeering state employees, which is a violation of the United States Constitution, Abbott said in an interview last week after issuing his disaster declaration but before receiving the HHS letter.

What the state of Texas is doing is, were saying that the federal government cannot commandeer our employees and tell us what to do, Abbott said. If the federal government has created a problem on the border that leads to migrant children being in the state is the federal governments responsibility to take care of those kids.

The back and forth with the feds comes days before Abbott is slated to host a border security summit on Thursday in Del Rio, Texas. The gathering aims to bring together local landowners, law enforcement and elected officials, as well as state agencies like the Texas Division of Emergency Management, the Texas Military Department and the Texas Department of Public Safety, to discuss strategies to secure border communities and ensure a safer future for all Texans, according to an advisory.

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Gov. Abbott: Biden admin pressuring Texas to aid in its illegal immigration program - KXAN.com

COVID-19: Supercomputer to support research on the pandemic – Taipei Times

By Lin Chia-nan / Staff reporter

The nations new supercomputer, Taiwania 3 (), has been inaugurated to support research related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Ministry of Science and Technology said on Tuesday, calling on academics and businesses to apply for free cloud services.

Taiwania 3 was developed by the National Center for High-performance Computing (NCHC) at a cost of about NT$400 million (US$14.4 million), the center said.

The center is one of eight institutes under the National Applied Research Laboratories, which is overseen by the ministry.

As the pandemic has severely affected peoples lives, the center asked itself what a supercomputer could do for the nation, NCHC Director-General Shepherd Shi () said in a video.

Shi, a former IBM engineer, was accompanied by former vice president and epidemiologist Chen Chien-jen (), and other experts in the video.

The center last year announced a special program allowing academics, researchers and businesses to apply for free cloud services amid the pandemic.

The program has supported many businesses to develop new medical applications, such as an electronic stethoscope developed by Heroic Faith Medical Science that can reduce the risk of virus transmission between medical personnel and patients, the center said.

Graphen Taiwan applied to use the centers artificial intelligence (AI) tools to chart the genetic evolution of different COVID-19 virus strains, it added.

The programs resources are upgraded with the commissioning of Taiwania 3, as well as assistance from Taiwan Web Service Corp, the center said, calling on those interested in using its resources to submit applications by July 31.

While there is no limits on projects, applicants can tender proposals related to medical applications, pandemic regulation, policy communications, stabilization of peoples livelihood, data mining and image recognition, the center said.

The centers Taiwania supercomputer series has three iterations: Taiwania, Taiwania 2 and Taiwania 3.

Taiwania 3 can perform 2.7 quadrillion floating-point operations per second (petaflops), higher than Taiwanias 1.7 petaflops, the center said.

While Taiwania 3 and Taiwania support high-performance computing, Taiwania 2 is better equipped for AI-related computing, with its computing performance reaching 9 petaflops, it said.

In the TOP500 List of global supercomputers announced in November last year, Taiwania 2 was ranked No. 28, followed by Taiwania 3 at No. 181 and Taiwania at No. 497.

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Worlds Fastest AI Supercomputer Perlmutter Will Help Create Largest-Ever 3D Map Of The Universe! – Mashable India

It has recently come to light that the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) has deployed the "Perlmutter" supercomputer. The supercomputer will help assemble the largest 3D map of the visible universe to date in one of its projects.

SEE ALSO: World's most powerful supercomputer now up and running, will help fight COVID-19

The details of the Perlmutter supercomputer have been published in a blog post by NVIDIA. The blog states that over two dozen applications are getting ready to be among the first to ride the 6,159 NVIDIA A100 Tensor Core GPUs in Perlmutter. Its being lauded as the worlds fastest AI supercomputer and will deliver nearly four exaflops of AI performance for more than 7,000 researchers.

Talking about the 3D map of the universe, the Perlmutter supercomputer will process data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), which is a kind of cosmic camera that can capture around 5,000 galaxies in a single exposure.

Moreover, preparing a years worth of data for publication can take weeks or months on other systems, however, the Perlmutter supercomputer can get it done within just a few days. And this is just one of the many advanced projects that will run on this supercomputer.

SEE ALSO: Supercomputer Can Create Its Own Universe To Simulate Galactic Evolution

In the past, it was impossible to do fully atomistic simulations of big systems like battery interfaces, but now scientists plan to use Perlmutter to do just that, said Brandon Cook, an applications performance specialist at NERSC whos helping researchers launch such projects. Apart from these projects, Perlmutters high computing power will also be used in a slew of other fields including materials science, quantum physics, climate projections, biological research and more.

SEE ALSO: Scientists think burying 6.7 million sperm samples on the Moon will save mankind

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Worlds Fastest AI Supercomputer Perlmutter Will Help Create Largest-Ever 3D Map Of The Universe! - Mashable India

Space Weather Prediction Gets a Supercomputing Boost – HPCwire

Solar winds are a hot topic in the HPC world right now, with supercomputer-powered research spanning from the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (which used Oak Ridges Titan system) to University College London (which used resources from the DiRAC HPC facility). One of the larger efforts is a $3.2 million initiative led by the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH), which last September began a three-year effort to develop space weather prediction software in partnership with an array of supercomputer resources. Now, the teams efforts are bearing fruit.

Space weather is dangerous to spaceborne electronics including satellites and to infrastructure like communications networks on Earth. Space weather requires a real-time product so we can predict impacts before an event, not just afterward, said Nikolai Pogorelov, principal investigator for the project and a professor of space science at UAH, in an interview with Aaron Dubrow of the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC). We dont think about it, but electrical communication, GPS and everyday gadgets can be affected by extreme space weather effects.

The research is being assisted by supercomputers from the NASA Advanced Supercomputing Facility, the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) and TACC. At TACC, the researchers have been using Frontera, which delivers 23.5 Linpack petaflops and places in the top ten supercomputers on the Top500.

These resources are being levied to study backstreaming ions, which are carried away from the sun by the magnetized plasma of the solar winds. The researchers find these particles useful in predicting the time and size of coronal mass ejections (major solar weather events). These simulations, run primarily on Frontera, are recreating the phenomenon and comparing the results to observations from the Voyager 1 and 2 probes. Some non-thermal particles can be further accelerated to create solar energetic particles that are particularly important for space weather conditions on Earth and for people in space, he said.

Fifteen years ago, we didnt know that much about the interstellar medium or solar wind properties, Pogorelov said. We have so many observations available today, which allow us to validate our codes and make them much more reliable.

This research, blending intricate science, advanced computing and exciting observations, will advance our understanding of how the sun drives space weather and its effects on Earth, added Mangala Sharma, director of the Space Weather program at the National Science Foundation (NSF). The work will help scientists predict space weather events and build our nations resilience against these potential natural hazards.

For Pogorelov, this research is just the beginning of a surge in newly high-resolution research on space weather, enabled by data from instruments like the Solar Wind Electrons, Protons and Alphas (SWEAP) instrument aboard the Parker Solar Probe.

No doubt, in years to come, the quality of data from the photosphere and solar corona will be improved dramatically, both because of new data available and new, more sophisticated ways to work with data, he said. Were trying to build software in a way that if a user comes up with better boundary conditions from new science missions, it will be easier for them to integrate that information.

To learn more, read the article by TACCs Aaron Dubrow here.

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Space Weather Prediction Gets a Supercomputing Boost - HPCwire

Supercomputer predicts Euro 2020 with England beating Spain and Portugal but losing on penalties to… – The Sun

ENGLAND put their penalty shootout demons behind them in Russia to beat Colombia - but they are set to return against the Germans AGAIN this summer.

Before that, though, the Three Lions will dump out both Spain and Portugal in the knockout stages.

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That is according to predictions from a supercomputer that has churned out the results for the whole of Euro 2020, as reported by talkSPORT.

And it spells more semi-final heartbreak for Gareth Southgate.

The England boss famously missed his spot-kick 25 years ago as the Germans scraped through to the final.

But this time around he must watch on from the sidelines as one of his 26 players fails from 12 yards, probably against Manuel Neuer, after a 2-2 draw.

France's 3-2 win after extra-time in the final will do little to soften the blow.

The machine backs England to top Group D with Croatia through in second but Czech Republic and bottom Scotland crash out.

Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain and France are the other group winners, while Wales finish fourth in Group A.

The pick of the round-of-16 ties sees the Three Lions take out Portugal 2-1 after extra-time following the 2004 and 2006 pain while Germany edge past the Dutch on penalties.

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Dream Team Euros

In the quarter-finals, England stun Spain 3-1 and Belgium get past Italy 2-1 after extra-time.

Germany need an additional 30 minutes to register a 3-1 victory over Turkey while France's 3-1 win against Croatia is a repeat outcome of the 2018 World Cup final.

In the other semi-final, France squeeze past Belgium - this time 2-1 rather than the 1-0 result three years ago.

And Kylian Mbappe and Co make it back-to-back major tournaments after a dramatic final at Wembley on July 11.

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Supercomputer predicts Euro 2020 with England beating Spain and Portugal but losing on penalties to... - The Sun

Super Computer predicts Euro 2020 winner England stun Spain but its penalty heartbreak for the Three Lio… – talkSPORT.com

Euro 2020 is here and its looking set to be one of the most competitive tournaments ever.

France, Belgium, Germany, Portugal and Spain are contenders for the Henri Delaunay trophy, while there are rumours abound that football might just be coming home but to England, Scotland or Wales?

2020 SOPA Img

The European Championship, delayed a year due to the coronavirus pandemic, is set to be a feast of football.

In total, 51 games will take place across 11 countries, while the semi-final and final will be staged at Wembley should Gareth Southgate and the boys need any more inspiration.

But before you get dreaming about Harry Kane lifting the trophy, its important to have a reality check.

France are chock full of stars with Karim Benzema rejoining Didier Deschamps attack, which already includes Kylian Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann.

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Portugal will be led by the evergreen Cristiano Ronaldo, aided by Manchester United superstar Bruno Fernandes and the likes of Joao Felix and Ruben Dias.

Germany and Spain will also be looking to cause a stir, while Belgiums Golden Generation will attempt to emerge victorious, with their hopes resting on the fitness of Kevin De Bruyne and Eden Hazard.

There will also be some dark horses, such as Denmark, Turkey, and Austria, looking to pull off some shock results.

But, as ever, football is hard to predict.

So here, talkSPORT has booted up the Super Computer in association with Betfair to find out just what could happen at Euro 2020.

Heres how it predicted the results to unfold

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Group A

Only one winner here, it would seem.

Italy are favourites to win the group, and they do so, according to the talkSPORT Super Computer.

Turkey make it through in second place, while Switzerland will also be in the round of 16, qualifying as one of the best third-place nations.

There will be no repeat of 2016 for Wales with Gareth Bale and co going home early.

Group B

Its Finland who limp home here and there is nothing Teemu Pukki can do about it.

Belgium have the stars to top the standings, while Denmark pip Russia to second spot.

But, dont fear, Stanislav Cherchesovs moustache will reach the knockout phase by finishing as one of the best third-place sides.

Group C

Having lost goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen prior to the tournament, its going to get a bit trickier for Netherlands, but are still tipped to win Group C.

Ukraine sneak ahead of Austria but, once again, this lot get a second chance as a best third-place side.

New Real Madrid signing David Alaba will be thanking his lucky stars.

Group D

Its the big one.

A tricky group for England as they face auld enemy Scotland as well as Croatia, their 2018 World Cup conquerors.

But fear not, as they are backed to come through as group winners.

Croatia make it out too, but its commiserations to Czech Republic and Scotland, who fall at the first hurdle.

Group E

Spain arent as strong as they used to be but they still sail through as group winners in 2021.

Without Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Sweden cant get past Poland who have the firepower of Robert Lewandowski.

Slovakia prop up the table.

Group F

Its the Group of Death and France and Portugal are set to duke it out for top spot.

Deschamps side finish first, Ronaldos lot in second, and Germany have to settle for third.

Thats not the end for the Germans, though, as they sneak into the knockouts with a third-place finish.

Hungary didnt stand a chance but hopefully well see them again soon.

Now things are getting interesting!

Belgium edge out Switzerland to reach the last eight, where they will face Italy, who sneak beyond Ukraine.

France make light work of Austria, while Croatia battle to a victory over Poland, which could frustrate Lewandowskis Ballon dOr hopes.

Whats that? England make it past Portugal in a knockout game? No, you arent dreaming. Helder Postiga isnt around to stop them this time.

But the Three Lions will face Spain in the next stage as they defeat Russia revenge for World Cup 2018.

Germany squeak past Netherlands on penalties and will take on Turkey, who beat Denmark.

When talkSPORT said this tournament was more competitive than ever, we werent joking!

Belgium make it into the last four past Italy just and they will take on France, who had it much easier against Croatia in a replay of the 2018 World Cup final.

Southgates starlets stun Spain with a glorious 2-1 win but next up is an old enemy as Germany beat Turkey, but only after extra-time.

Heres where the story ends for the Three Lions, beaten at Wembley by Germany, on penalties devastating.

Meanwhile, France also make the Wembley showpiece as they defeat neighbours Belgium.

talkSPORT was surprised the Super Computer didnt blow a fuse with some of these classics being played but after chuntering away it gave us the winner.

France, on the back of their World Cup win in 2018, claim the European Championship triumph they probably feel they should have had back on home soil in 2016.

Congratulation to Kylian and the boys history is yours!

Now, lets hope England can make a mockery of the Super Computer

Euro 2020 winner odds

Heres the favourites for glory this summer

France 24/5

England 26/5

Belgium 34/5

Germany 17/2

Portugal 17/2

Spain 17/2

Italy 17/2

Netherlands 11/1

Denmark 27/1

Croatia 45/1

*Odds correct at time of writing, may have changed since publication. See latest odds at http://www.betfair.com.

talkSPORT and talkSPORT 2 will havelivecommentary of EVERY game of Euro 2020. You wont miss a thing as we bring you round the clock coverage, reaction and analysis from June 11-July 11. Listen online HERE.

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Super Computer predicts Euro 2020 winner England stun Spain but its penalty heartbreak for the Three Lio... - talkSPORT.com

Looking to the future of quantum cloud computing – Siliconrepublic.com – Siliconrepublic.com

Trinity College Dublins Dan Kilper and University of Arizonas Saikat Guha discuss the quantum cloud and how it could be achieved.

Quantum computing has been receiving a lot of attention in recent years as several web-scale providers race towards so-called quantum advantage the point at which a quantum computer is able to exceed the computing abilities of classical computing.

Large public sector investments worldwide have fuelled research activity within the academic community. The first claim of quantum advantage emerged in 2019 when Google, NASA and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) demonstrated a computation that the quantum computer completed in 200 seconds and that the ORNL supercomputer verified up to the point of quantum advantage, estimated to require 10,000 years to complete to the end.

Roadmaps that take quantum computers even further into this regime are advancing steadily. IBM has made quantum computers available for online access for many years now and recently Amazon and Microsoft started cloud services to provide access for users to several different quantum computing platforms. So, what comes next?

The step beyond access to a single quantum computer is access to a network of quantum computers. We are starting to see this emerge from the web or cloud-based quantum computers offered by cloud providers effectively quantum computing as a service, sometimes referred to as cloud-based quantum computing.

This consists of quantum computers connected by classical networks and exchanging classical information in the form of bits, or digital ones and zeros. When quantum computers are connected in this way, they each can perform separate quantum computations and return the classical results that the user is looking for.

It turns out that with quantum computers, there are other possibilities. Quantum computers perform operations on quantum bits, or qubits. It is possible for two quantum computers to exchange information in the form of qubits instead of classical bits. We refer to networks that transport qubits as quantum networks. If we can connect two or more quantum computers over a quantum network, then they will be able to combine their computations such that they might behave as a single larger quantum computer.

Quantum computing distributed over quantum networks thus has the potential to significantly enhance the computing power of quantum computers. In fact, if we had quantum networks today, many believe that we could immediately build large quantum computers far into the advantage regime simply by connecting many instances of todays quantum computers over a quantum network. With quantum networks built, and interconnected at various scales, we could build a quantum internet. And at the heart of this quantum internet, one would expect to find quantum computing clouds.

At present, scientists and engineers are still working on understanding how to construct such a quantum computing cloud. The key to quantum computing power is the number of qubits in the computer. These are typically micro-circuits or ions kept at cryogenic temperatures, near minus 273 degrees Celsius.

While these machines have been growing steadily in size, it is expected that they will eventually reach a practical size limit and therefore further computing power is likely to come from network connections across quantum computers within the data centre, very much like todays current classical computing data centres. Instead of racks of servers, one would expect rows of cryostats.

Quantum computing distributed over quantum networks has the potential to significantly enhance the computing power of quantum computers

Once we start imagining a quantum internet, we quickly realise that there are many software structures that we use in the classical internet that might need some type of analogue in the quantum internet.

Starting with the computers, we will need quantum operating systems and computing languages. This is complicated by the fact that quantum computers are still limited in size and not engineered to run operating systems and programming the way that we do in classical computers. Nevertheless, based on our understanding of how a quantum computer works, researchers have developed operating systems and programming languages that might be used once a quantum computer of sufficient power and functionality is able to run them.

Cloud computing and networking rely on other software technologies such as hypervisors, which manage how a computer is divided up into several virtual machines, and routing protocols to send data over the network. In fact, research is underway to develop each of these for the quantum internet. With quantum computer operating systems still under development, it is difficult to develop a hypervisor to run multiple operating systems on the same quantum computer as a classical hypervisor would.

By understanding the physical architecture of quantum computers, however, one can start to imagine how it might be organised to support different subsets of qubits to effectively run as separate quantum computers, potentially using different physical qubit technologies and employing different sub-architectures, within a single machine.

One important difference between quantum and classical computers and networks is that quantum computers can make use of classical computers to perform many of their functions. In fact, a quantum computer in itself is a tremendous feat of classical system engineering with many complex controls to set up and operate the quantum computations. This is a very different starting point from classical computers.

The same can be said for quantum networks, which have the classical internet to provide control functions to manage the network operations. It is likely that we will rely on classical computers and networks to operate their quantum analogues for some time. Just as a computer motherboard has many other types of electronics other than the microprocessor chip, it is likely that quantum computers will continue to rely on classical processors to do much of the mundane work behind their operation.

With the advent of the quantum internet, it is presumable that a quantum-signalling-equipped control plane might be able to support certain quantum network functions even more efficiently.

When talking about quantum computers and networks, scientists often refer to fault-tolerant operations. Fault tolerance is a particularly important step toward realising quantum cloud computing. Without fault tolerance, quantum operations are essentially single-shot computations that are initialised and then run to a stopping point that is limited by the accumulation of errors due to quantum memory lifetimes expiring as well as the noise that enters the system with each step in the computation.

Fault tolerance would allow for quantum operations to continue indefinitely with each result of a computation feeding the next. This is essential, for example, to run a computer operating system.

In the case of networks, loss and noise limit the distance that qubits can be transported on the order of 100km today. Fault tolerance through operations such as quantum error correction would allow for quantum networks to extend around the world. This is quite difficult for quantum networks because, unlike classical networks, quantum signals cannot be amplified.

We use amplifiers everywhere in classical networks to boost signals that are reduced due to losses, for example, from traveling down an optical fibre. If we boost a qubit signal with an optical amplifier, we would destroy its quantum properties. Instead, we need to build quantum repeaters to overcome signal losses and noise.

Together we have our sights set on realising the networks that will make up the quantum internet

If we can connect two fault-tolerant quantum computers at a distance that is less than the loss limits for the qubits, then the quantum error correction capabilities in the computers can in principle recover the quantum signal. If we build a chain of such quantum computers each passing quantum information to the next, then we can achieve the fault-tolerant quantum network that we need. This chain of computers linking together is reminiscent of the early classical internet when computers were used to route packets through the network. Today we use packet routers instead.

If you look under the hood of a packet router, it is composed of many powerful microprocessors that have replaced the computer routers and are much more efficient at the specific routing tasks involved. Thus, one might imagine a quantum analogue to the packet router, which would be a small purpose-built quantum computer designed for recovering and transmitting qubits through the network. These are what we refer to today as quantum repeaters, and with these quantum repeaters we could build a global quantum internet.

Currently there is much work underway to realise a fault-tolerant quantum repeater. Recently a team in the NSF Center for Quantum Networks (CQN)achieved an important milestone in that they were able to use a quantum memory to transmit a qubit beyond its usual loss limit. This is a building block for a quantum repeater. The SFI Connect Centre in Ireland is also working on classical network control systems that can be used to operate a network of such repeaters.

Together we have our sights set on realising the networks that will make up the quantum internet.

By Dan Kilper and Saikat Guha

Dan Kilper is professor of future communication networks at Trinity College Dublin and director of the Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) Connect research centre.

Saikat Guha is director of the NSF-ERC Center for Quantum Networks and professor of optical sciences, electrical and computer engineering, and applied mathematics at the University of Arizona.

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Looking to the future of quantum cloud computing - Siliconrepublic.com - Siliconrepublic.com