In their paper published in the journal Communications Materials, the group describes how they used a ferromagnetic Josephson junction to create the flux qubit and how well it performed.
Japanese researchers have developed the world’s first superconducting flux qubit that functions in a zero magnetic field.
The newly developed superconducting flux qubit uses a ferromagnetic Josephson junction (named π-junction). The new π-junction uses a particular type of Josephson junction that creates a 180-degree (π) ...
3D illustration of a working quantum computer with fictitious and realistic design elements combined. Japanese researchers have developed the world’s first superconducting flux qubit that ...
It's all in flux in a really exciting and unprecedented ... and we're incredibly excited and delighted to be building the first million-qubit-class machine in Queensland. These extraordinary ...
It’s all in flux in a really exciting and unprecedented way ... I’m on the board of PsiQuantum, and we’re incredibly excited and delighted to be building the first million-qubit-class machine in ...
Nanodrop spectrophotometer (NanoDrop 1000 Thermo Fisher) and a Qubit fluorimeter (Thermo Fisher ... These blooms trigger the flux of carbon along the trophic chains, with bacterioplankton being the ...