In a paper to be published on Thursday, Oct. 13, inASU Regents Professor Ying-Cheng Lai, his former ASU doctoral student Lei Ying and experimentalist Haohua Wang, both professors at Zhejiang University in China, have demonstrated a"first look" at the emergence of quantum many-body scarring states as a robust mechanism for maintaining coherence among interacting qubits.
Classical, or binary computing relies on transistors—which can represent only the"1" or the"0" at a single time. In , qubits can represent both 0 and 1 simultaneously, which can exponentially accelerate computing processes.
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