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Google Just Revealed a 100% Stable Quantum Computer — AI is Obsolete

Google has unveiled a quantum computing breakthrough that could reshape the future of artificial intelligence, cryptography, medicine, and global technology. But does this really mean AI is becoming obsolete?

In this video, we break down Google’s Willow quantum chip, the revolutionary error-correction milestone it achieved, and why experts believe this could be one of the biggest advances in computing history. We also explain what the headlines get wrong, how quantum computing actually differs from AI, and why the future is likely to be a combination of both technologies rather than a competition.

You’ll discover:
• What makes Google’s Willow chip so significant.
• How quantum computers differ from classical AI
• Why the \.

University of Chicago Just Found a Shortcut Quantum Computers Needed for Years

University of Chicago researchers may have found the shortcut quantum computers have needed for decades.

In this video, we break down a major quantum computing breakthrough involving QLDPC error correction codes, reconfigurable atom arrays, and movable neutral atoms controlled by laser light. This new approach could reduce the number of physical qubits needed for practical fault-tolerant quantum computing by a factor of ten to twenty.

That matters because quantum computers have always faced one massive problem: qubits are extremely fragile. Traditional surface-code error correction can require thousands of physical qubits just to protect one reliable logical qubit, pushing useful quantum computers decades into the future. But this new blueprint could bring the requirement down from millions of qubits to tens of thousands.

We also explain why this discovery could affect medicine, drug discovery, encryption, post-quantum cybersecurity, climate technology, materials science, artificial intelligence, and the global race to build real quantum machines.

This is not a finished quantum computer yet. It is a credible engineering roadmap through one of the biggest bottlenecks in the field. But it may move practical quantum computing much closer than experts expected.

Watch the full video to understand why this University of Chicago breakthrough could change the quantum timeline.

Quantum Paradoxes: 5 Ways to Test the Multiverse | Maria Violaris

Can we actually test whether the multiverse is real? Not just philosophicallybut scientifically?

Quantum physicist Maria Violaris presents five remarkable experiments, from Schrödinger’s cat to Google’s Willow quantum chip, that put the multiverse to the test. Along the way, she untangles two of the strangest phenomena in all of physics — quantum measurement and entanglement — and reveals how a thought experiment designed to test the multiverse in 1985 accidentally launched today’s billion-dollar quantum computing race.

Maria also shares a puzzling thought experiment of her own that overturns a long-held assumption: that you can never communicate across branches of the multiverse.

Join this channel to get access to Maria’s exclusive Member’s Only Q&A:
/ @theroyalinstitution.

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Maria Violaris is a quantum physicist and prize-winning science communicator with a PhD in the foundations of quantum information from the University of Oxford. She works on quantum theory research at Oxford Quantum Circuits, runs a YouTube channel and the Quantum Foundations Podcast, and pioneered the use of quantum thought experiments for quantum computing education through her Quantum Paradoxes series at IBM Quantum.

Quantum-inspired AI could tailor patients’ cancer treatment to their entire molecular background

For a child diagnosed with neuroblastoma—the most common infant cancer, occurring when early nerve cells grow out of control—the path to treatment isn’t simple. Some types of neuroblastoma resolve on their own, while others require aggressive intervention. Researchers have tried matching treatments to patients based on one-gene mutations with limited success. This is because patients’ outcomes depend on their entire molecular background, containing millions or even billions of features, such as DNA and RNA from tissues and blood.

“It’s much more than just one gene—everything that’s happening in the cells of the patient matters,” said Orly Alter, an associate professor of biomedical engineering at the University of Utah’s Scientific Computing & Imaging Institute.

Current artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) approaches require massive amounts of training data and, specifically, vastly more patient samples than genetic features.

Advances in materials science are helping unlock secrets of nanomaterials

New instruments on the horizon promise the most precise tools yet to study and experiment on the smallest and most complex materials ever manufactured. In a paper published in the journal Nature Materials, University of Cincinnati assistant professor Hanxun Jin highlighted advances in ultrasensitive technology to measure and manipulate some of the tiniest nanomaterials used in manufacturing, aerospace, medicine and more.

And when Jin says tiny, he means really tiny. Semiconductor nanocrystals called quantum dots that are used in TV screens are so small they’re considered zero-dimensional. That makes the field of nanomaterials characterization a particularly exciting one, Jin said.

Defect detection automated in diamond, other advanced semiconductors

Materials scientists at Rice University have developed a new workflow methodology for measuring microscopic defects in diamond and other advanced semiconductor materials. By making it easier to spot flaws that can undermine performance, the approach could accelerate the development of more reliable electronic and quantum devices.

The research team developed a custom Python-based software tool to rapidly analyze data from high-resolution X-ray diffraction, a technique that uses X-rays to probe a material’s internal crystal structure. The software analyzes the resulting diffraction patterns, picks up on dislocations and irregularities in the atomic lattice, and calculates their density in a given material.

“Dislocations can disrupt how charge and heat move through the material, which impacts how efficient and reliable a device is and how easy it is to manufacture at scale,” said Xiang Zhang, assistant research professor of materials science and nanoengineering at Rice and a corresponding author on the study published in Advanced Materials.

Non-Hermitian geometry reveals when quantum amplification depends only on start and end points

In quantum mechanics, the geometry of quantum states has emerged as a powerful framework for understanding phenomena ranging from electrical conductivity to superconductivity. One research direction aims to extend these geometric concepts to non-Hermitian quantum mechanics—where systems can exchange energy with their environment—including the generalization of the Berry phase, a key geometric quantity, to the non-Hermitian case.

However, many geometric properties unique to non-Hermitian quantum mechanics remain poorly understood.

“We knew geometry played a central role in ordinary quantum mechanics, but what genuinely new geometric effects might emerge in the non-Hermitian case was far from clear,” explains Tomoki Ozawa, a theoretical physicist at AIMR. “We wanted to identify geometric phenomena that are truly intrinsic to non-Hermitian quantum mechanics.”

This Experiment Could Change Physics Forever

Go to https://ground.news/sabine to get 40% off the Vantage plan and see through sensationalized reporting. Stay fully informed on events around the world with Ground News.

The #1 most-wanted particle in physics is the graviton, a quantum of gravity. If physicists were to prove that gravitons exist, they would unambiguously prove that Einstein’s theory is ultimately wrong and must be replaced by a more complete theory that gives quantum properties to space and time. In a recent paper, a physicist came up with an ingenious experiment that could prove that gravitons do exist. Let’s take a look.

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Stanford Just Built a Quantum Computer That Needs No Extreme Cooling

Stanford researchers may have just opened the door to a future where quantum technology no longer depends on multi-million-dollar cryogenic systems.

In this video, we break down Stanford University’s groundbreaking 2025 research that demonstrated room-temperature photon-electron quantum entanglement on a silicon-compatible chip. While this is not yet a full quantum computer, it represents a major step toward solving one of the biggest challenges in quantum technology: the extreme cooling requirements that have limited quantum systems for decades.

We’ll explore how twisted light, molybdenum diselenide (MoSe₂), valley states, and silicon nanostructures work together to create stable quantum interactions without dilution refrigerators operating near absolute zero. You’ll also learn what this breakthrough means for the future of quantum computing, quantum communication, quantum cryptography, and the emerging quantum internet.

🔹 What Stanford actually built.
🔹 Why current quantum computers require ultra-cold temperatures.
🔹 How room-temperature quantum entanglement was achieved.
🔹 The role of twisted photons and valley states.
🔹 What this breakthrough can and cannot do today.
🔹 Potential impact on IBM, Google, Microsoft, IonQ, and the broader quantum industry.
🔹 The future of room-temperature quantum networks and computing.

If this technology successfully scales, it could dramatically reduce the cost, complexity, and energy requirements of quantum systems, potentially transforming quantum technology from a specialized laboratory tool into a widely deployable platform.

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