IBM Quantum

IBM Quantum

IT Services and IT Consulting

Yorktown Heights, New York 61,225 followers

Bringing useful quantum computing to the world.

About us

IBM Quantum leads the world in quantum computing, a technology we believe will power the next step in computing as a whole. In 2016, we made history by putting the first quantum processor in the cloud, enabling anyone to run experiments on quantum hardware. Since then, not only have we built the world's largest quantum computing community—with more than 400,000 users exploring this nascent technology through IBM Quantum cloud services and tools like Qiskit Runtime—but we've also established the world's largest quantum workforce. Now, with a quantum fleet comprising 20+ of the world's most powerful quantum systems, IBM Quantum aims to transform society's most challenging problems into valuable opportunities. As part of our work toward that goal, we are committed to fostering a truly global quantum economy. Follow the IBM Quantum Showcase Page on LinkedIn for the latest news, technical resources, and job opportunities from IBM Quantum.

Industry
IT Services and IT Consulting
Company size
10,001+ employees
Headquarters
Yorktown Heights, New York
Founded
2016
Specialties
Quantum Computing, Quantum Information Processing, Quantum Algorithms, Quantum Hardware Engineering, Quantum Computing Applications Research, Quantum Safe Cryptography, Quantum Chemistry, and Quantum Machine Learning

Updates

  • View organization page for IBM Quantum, graphic

    61,225 followers

    Join us Tuesday, December 3 at 9AM ET for an IBM Quantum Industry Webinar, focusing on quantum computing’s potential impact to the energy industry and new opportunities for sustainability. This event features IBM’s Dr. Bob Parney, Global Lead, Quantum for Energy, Oil and Gas and Sustainability. Register here: https://ibm.co/4i79HZG In the next few years, we anticipate quantum-centric supercomputing—an architecture combining quantum and classical HPC—leading to opportunities in materials discovery, search and optimization, and machine learning. In the energy sector specifically, possible use cases include hydrogen and alternative fuel production, new battery material discovery and development, optimization of electric grids, and improved methods and materials for carbon sequestration.

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    We’re excited to announce an important update in our collaboration with IBM Quantum, aimed at advancing quantum-centric supercomputing. Together, we’re working to develop a unified programming model built on Qiskit, IBM’s leading quantum software. This initiative will enable seamless integration of quantum and classical hardware resources, redefining possibilities for high-performance computing (HPC) workflows. 🔑 What does this mean? - A unified architecture that works across IBM’s quantum computers, Pasqal’s neutral atom quantum devices, and classical HPC resources like CPUs and GPUs. - Developers will be able to use Qiskit SDK to leverage Pasqal’s quantum hardware, making hybrid workflows more accessible than ever. - The model will enable users to select the best hardware for each task in a cohesive framework, accelerating the usability and performance of complex computational workflows. This collaboration reflects our commitment to enabling quantum developers and HPC users to harness the power of quantum technologies and create solutions for some of the world’s most complex computational challenges 🌍 Together with IBM, we’re laying the foundation for quantum-centric supercomputing and helping redefine the future of HPC. Stay tuned for more updates as we continue this collaborative journey! 🌟 🔗 Read all the details here - https://lnkd.in/ettcciek #QuantumComputing #HPC #Innovation #Collaboration #IBMQuantum #Pasqal

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  • View organization page for IBM Quantum, graphic

    61,225 followers

    Let’s talk about quantum-centric supercomputing. https://ibm.co/3Zh5qeZ We've often said that the path to a quantum advantage is not linear, and that one of the clearest paths to useful quantum computing will involve quantum computers working *together* with classical supercomputing resources. At this year's SC24 Conference in Atlanta, VP of IBM Quantum Jay Gambetta presented this vision to high-performance computer users as an invitation to join us on that journey. We believe the future of computing will involve mapping interesting research questions to the kinds of linear algebra problems we represent with tensors and quantum circuits. Quantum computers can significantly extend our ability to solve large, complex circuits. Classical supercomputing can provide the physical overhead needed to help quantum computers solve those problems without being biased by noise. Together, we believe quantum and classical HPC resources can open the door to new algorithms we could not discover using classical computing alone. We are deploying our quantum computers alongside classical HPC using resource management systems like Slurm so that HPC users can participate in this new era of quantum-enabled scientific discovery. To fulfill our mission of delivering useful quantum computing to the world, it is vital that we build a singular, fine-tuned user experience that encourages the exploration of quantum-centric supercomputing for researchers, developers, and others working at the forefront of computational science. We hope you'll come along for the ride. Head to the IBM Quantum blog linked above for more details.

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  • View organization page for IBM Quantum, graphic

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    The latest IBM Quantum System One is officially operational at Yonsei University in Seoul, South Korea—only the second on a university campus in the world. https://ibm.co/491hbct The system at Yonsei University is powered by a 127-qubit IBM Quantum Eagle processor, which will now empower students, faculty, and researchers to do utility-scale work. Beyond that, we look forward to the potential of this system to fuel our ongoing efforts to accelerate the use of quantum applications, the discovery of quantum algorithms, and to help build a quantum workforce in Korea. The IBM Quantum System One at Yonsei University is now part of IBM’s fleet of utility-scale quantum computers available via the cloud and the fifth, globally, at dedicated sites, including systems in the United States, Canada, Germany and Japan. Learn more at the press release linked above.

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    This year, IBM Quantum hosted its first ever Quantum Developer Conference — a gathering for developers to get an exclusive, hands-on preview of cutting-edge tools that will help them explore in the era of utility. QDC 2024 kicked off with our annual State of the Union address, featuring the latest updates and advances from IBM Quantum as we work to bring useful quantum computing to the world. The event brought together over 200 quantum developers and featured technical seminars, challenges, office hours, IBM and partner activation village, entertainment, and lab tours. There were also multiple opportunities for networking with researchers, engineers, experts! If you want to re-live the magic of QDC or you weren’t able to attend, all of the content and materials are now live on IBM Quantum Learning: https://ibm.co/3ZbToUa Be sure to follow this page for future announcements related to QDC and other IBM Quantum events!

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  • View organization page for IBM Quantum, graphic

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    If you’re attending SuperComputing 2024 in Atlanta this week, join us for two insightful sessions about quantum computing. The first is a quantum seminar on Tuesday, November 19 at 9AM ET hosted by IBM Principal Research Scientist Antonio Córcoles, and IBM Project Management Lead Tushar Mittal. The second on Wednesday, November 20 at 2:15PM ET is part of the SC24 Invited Talks series. It will feature IBM VP of Quantum Jay Gambetta who will be talking about quantum-centric supercomputing. Scan the QR codes on the images below or head to the respective links to register and more info. SC24 Quantum Seminar: https://ibm.co/3YYam6Y SC24 Invited Talks Quantum-Centric Supercomputing: A New Perspective on Computing https://ibm.co/3AZUHMq

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  • View organization page for IBM Quantum, graphic

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    We’re exploring where quantum can make the largest impact in energy with E.ON. https://ibm.co/4fobSGB E.ON serves over 47 million customers across 17 countries everyday, powering infrastructure through electricity and gas—and that is no easy task. In years past, E.ON could reasonably predict costs and consumption to ensure these customers would always have the lights on. Now, with changes in technology, sudden weather, and the differing ways we use electricity each day, small variables to supply and demand of energy can drastically impact predictability of costs, resource allocation, and energy delivery. It is a complex problem E.ON faces, but that’s exactly what quantum computing aims to solve—problems with many variables that might take millennia to solve on classical supercomputers might have much more straightforward solutions using quantum computing algorithms. E.ON is exploring how quantum could help them plan for coming fluctuations and predict patterns years into the future, which ultimately lower costs for their customers and keep the lights on for all. Head over to the link above for the full case study and watch the film on https://lnkd.in/exCbDYQ6 for more.

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    We’re excited to share some upcoming innovations and roadmap updates needed to realize fully error-corrected quantum computing at scale. https://ibm.co/4etLCtg On the pathway to realizing full-scale quantum computing is developing couplers that run gates across multiple quantum chips. This year at the first-ever IBM Quantum Developer Conference (QDC), we reported the results of two kinds of couplers: l-couplers, which connect chips with cables, and m-couplers, which seam together adjacent chips. First is a proof-of-concept for l-couplers we’ve named IBM Quantum Flamingo, which connects two Heron r2 chips with 4 connectors measuring up to a meter long. The next is an m-coupler proof-of-concept called IBM Quantum Crossbill. This concept connects three Herons with 548 couplers and 8 interchip m-coupler connections. At the moment, we’ve benchmarked the best CNOTs with errors per gates of 3.5%, while state transfer takes around 235 nanoseconds on average, on Flamingo. We expect these metrics to improve, and hope to debut a production-ready Flamingo chip for use by our clients at our 2025 quantum state-of-the-union. We will soon begin development on c-couplers, or couplers that link distant qubits on the same chip, with hopes for demonstrating this in 2026. These innovations are necessary to for us to implement scalable quantum computing, as well as the error correction code we shared earlier this year (https://ibm.co/4ezbrrE). This code has the potential to store quantum information with a fraction of the overhead associated with other leading error-correcting codes, but needs higher qubit connectivity between multiple chips to reach its potential—which we're also demonstrating today. We are excited at the prospect of the proof-of-concept innovations we’ve unveiled at this year’s QDC to help us get to that point. More details at the IBM Quantum blog above.

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    Today at the first-ever IBM Quantum Developer Conference (QDC), IBM Researchers shared that they’ve successfully delivered a system capable of running accurate calculations employing circuits with 5,000 two-qubit gates. https://ibm.biz/Bda9Kz The second iteration of the IBM Quantum Heron quantum processing unit is what drives theese capabilities—powered by 156 qubits in a heavy-hex layout. The new design preserves the tunable coupler architecture we introduced last year to suppress crosstalk, and features new two-level system mitigation to reduce the impact of noise. This newer Heron QPU not only features a 16x improvement in performance, but a significant 25x speed-up in terms of quickness over previous generations. But these improvements also require the collective effort of the quantum computing community to develop algorithms that would be able to leverage the full power of a system like the one we’re sharing today if we hope to drive the field forward. We believed that 5,000 two-qubit gates was an ideal goal, being in the regime of circuits beyond classical simulation. Reliable results from quantum circuits with 5,000+ gates grants users the opportunity to perform real scientific discovery with quantum computers, and to push forward in the search for quantum advantage. And we’re thrilled to share that a number of our startup partners have also delivered utility-scale capabilities—directly integrated as part of the Qiskit Functions catalog—with many approaching that 5,000 gate threshold. We committed to delivering monumental improvements in both our hardware and software. We asked the community to help us in the push for quantum algorithms that could take advantage of those improvements when ready. Now, we’re fully ready for our developer community to start seeking quantum advantages to help us deliver useful quantum computing to the world. More at the IBM Quantum Blog linked above.

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    ‘An Introduction to Quantum Machine Learning’—a new learning course— is now available for partners in the IBM Quantum Network. https://ibm.co/3ChDcri One of the most promising applications for quantum computing is data with complex structures. This new course introduces three of the most well-studied approaches—variational quantum circuits, VQCs with parallels to quantum neural networks, and quantum kernel estimation. This learning opportunity will provide a brief overview of related classical machine learning paradigms and explains how quantum computing plays a role. The course also shows learners how to integrate quantum computing results into existing classical workflows. For example, one use case within the lesson shows how to use a precomputed kernel matrix estimated using a quantum computer in a classical classifier in sklearn. The course is now available on the IBM Quantum Learning platform linked above, and once users complete the course, they can take an exam to earn a quantum machine learning badge via Credly.

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