February 17, 2025
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Tech News

Japan Launches the World's First Hybrid Quantum Supercomputer

Japan has unveiled Reimei, the world’s first hybrid quantum supercomputer, integrating quantum and classical computing to revolutionize scientific research and high-performance computing.

Talha Javaid, Technical Writer

Breakthrough in Computing

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Japan has unveiled Reimei, the world’s first operational hybrid quantum supercomputer, integrating a 20-qubit trapped-ion quantum system with Fugaku, the sixth-fastest supercomputer globally.

Housed at the Riken institute in Saitama, this system enhances research in physics, chemistry, and AI by combining classical and quantum computing strengths.

Advanced Quantum Capabilities

Unlike conventional quantum computers that use superconducting qubits, Reimei’s trapped-ion qubits offer longer coherence times and improved stability. A key innovation is ion shuttling, allowing qubits to move around circuits dynamically, enabling more complex quantum computations.

Reimei also features error-correction techniques using logical qubits, reducing calculation failures and increasing reliability. This hybrid system accelerates scientific simulations, optimization problems, and machine learning applications.

Japan’s initiative places it at the forefront of hybrid quantum computing, setting a new benchmark in computational advancements. As quantum technology continues to evolve, such integrations pave the way for future breakthroughs in high-performance computing.

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