• Latest
  • Trending
IBM sets the course to build world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer

IBM sets the course to build world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining

Brightcom Group Ltd – Results summary & share price overview

Brightcom Group Ltd – Results summary & share price overview

Paradip Port handles significant crude oil traffic, five vessels expected next week

Iron ore shipments at Indian major ports dip marginally during April-November

IndiGo signals strong recovery — What’s next?

IndiGo signals strong recovery — What’s next?

U.S.–China trade easing boosts soybean shipments in 2025

U.S.–China trade easing boosts soybean shipments in 2025

India’s E&M industry to hit $47.2 bn by 2029 at 7.8% CAGR: PwC Report

India’s E&M industry to hit $47.2 bn by 2029 at 7.8% CAGR: PwC Report

IPO Tracker: What investors should know about CORONA Remedies?

IPO Tracker: What investors should know about CORONA Remedies?

SEBI drops hammer on influencer Avadhut Sathe; ₹601 crore refund ordered

SEBI drops hammer on influencer Avadhut Sathe; ₹601 crore refund ordered

PNB slashes repo-linked lending rate to 8.10% after RBI cut

PNB slashes repo-linked lending rate to 8.10% after RBI cut

Kaynes Tech shares corrected 20% last week: Know its Q2FY26 performance

Kaynes Tech shares corrected 20% last week: Know its Q2FY26 performance

AWS introduces Graviton5—the company’s most powerful and efficient CPU

AWS introduces Graviton5—the company’s most powerful and efficient CPU

Strong Indian demand lifts Brazil’s cotton exports toward 3.2M tons

Strong Indian demand lifts Brazil’s cotton exports toward 3.2M tons

Sunday, December 7, 2025
  • Login
Data Biz Times
  • Commodity
  • Data Story
  • Market
  • Business
  • Media Release
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Data Biz Times
No Result
View All Result

IBM sets the course to build world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer

in Media Release
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
IBM sets the course to build world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

DBT Bureau

Pune, 12 June 2025

IBM unveiled its path to build the world’s first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer, setting the stage for practical and scalable quantum computing.

Delivered by 2029, IBM Quantum Starling will be built in a new IBM Quantum Data Center in Poughkeepsie, New York and is expected to perform 20,000 times more operations than today’s quantum computers. To represent the computational state of an IBM Starling would require the memory of more than a quindecillion (1048) of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. With Starling, users will be able to fully explore the complexity of its quantum states, which are beyond the limited properties able to be accessed by current quantum computers.

IBM, which already operates a large, global fleet of quantum computers, is releasing a new Quantum Roadmap that outlines its plans to build out a practical, fault-tolerant quantum computer.

“IBM is charting the next frontier in quantum computing,” said Arvind Krishna, Chairman and CEO, IBM. “Our expertise across mathematics, physics, and engineering is paving the way for a large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer — one that will solve real-world challenges and unlock immense possibilities for business.”

A large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer with hundreds or thousands of logical qubits could run hundreds of millions to billions of operations, which could accelerate time and cost efficiencies in fields such as drug development, materials discovery, chemistry, and optimization.

Starling will be able to access the computational power required for these problems by running 100 million quantum operations using 200 logical qubits. It will be the foundation for IBM Quantum Blue Jay, which will be capable of executing 1 billion quantum operations over 2,000 logical qubits.

A logical qubit is a unit of an error-corrected quantum computer tasked with storing one qubit’s worth of quantum information. It is made from multiple physical qubits working together to store this information and monitor each other for errors.

Like classical computers, quantum computers need to be error corrected to run large workloads without faults. To do so, clusters of physical qubits are used to create a smaller number of logical qubits with lower error rates than the underlying physical qubits. Logical qubit error rates are suppressed exponentially with the size of the cluster, enabling them to run greater numbers of operations.

Creating increasing numbers of logical qubits capable of executing quantum circuits, with as few physical qubits as possible, is critical to quantum computing at scale. Until today, a clear path to building such a fault-tolerant system without unrealistic engineering overhead has not been published.

The Path to Large-Scale Fault Tolerance

The success of executing an efficient fault-tolerant architecture is dependent on the choice of its error-correcting code, and how the system is designed and built to enable this code to scale.

Alternative and previous gold-standard, error-correcting codes present fundamental engineering challenges. To scale, they would require an unfeasible number of physical qubits to create enough logical qubits to perform complex operations – necessitating impractical amounts of infrastructure and control electronics. This renders them unlikely to be able to be implemented beyond small-scale experiments and devices.

A practical, large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer requires an architecture that is:

  • Fault-tolerant to suppress enough errors for useful algorithms to succeed.
  • Able to prepare and measure logical qubits through computation.
  • Capable of applying universal instructions to these logical qubits.
  • Able to decode measurements from logical qubits in real-time and can alter subsequent instructions.
  • Modular to scale to hundreds or thousands of logical qubits to run more complex algorithms.
  • Efficient enough to execute meaningful algorithms with realistic physical resources, such as energy and infrastructure.

Today, IBM is introducing two new technical papers that detail how it will solve the above criteria to build a large-scale, fault-tolerant architecture.

The first paper unveils how such a system will process instructions and run operations effectively with qLDPC codes. This work builds on a groundbreaking approach to error correction featured on the cover of Nature that introduced quantum low-density parity check (qLDPC) codes. This code drastically reduces the number of physical qubits needed for error correction and cuts required overhead by approximately 90 percent, compared to other leading codes. Additionally, it lays out the resources required to reliably run large-scale quantum programs to prove the efficiency of such an architecture over others.

The second paper describes how to efficiently decode the information from the physical qubits and charts a path to identify and correct errors in real-time with conventional computing resources.

From Roadmap to Reality

The new IBM Quantum Roadmap outlines the key technology milestones that will demonstrate and execute the criteria for fault tolerance. Each new processor in the roadmap addresses specific challenges to build quantum computers that are modular, scalable, and error-corrected:

  • IBM Quantum Loon, expected in 2025, is designed to test architecture components for the qLDPC code, including “C-couplers” that connect qubits over longer distances within the same chip.
  • IBM Quantum Kookaburra, expected in 2026, will be IBM’s first modular processor designed to store and process encoded information. It will combine quantum memory with logic operations — the basic building block for scaling fault-tolerant systems beyond a single chip.
  • IBM Quantum Cockatoo, expected in 2027, will entangle two Kookaburra modules using “L-couplers.” This architecture will link quantum chips together like nodes in a larger system, avoiding the need to build impractically large chips.

Together, these advancements are being designed to culminate in Starling in 2029.

Related Posts

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 7 Dec 2025 In a landmark step towards strengthening industry-academia collaboration, NMDC, India’s largest iron ore producer,...

HCLTech, UWA launch global micro-credential programs in AI and cybersecurity

HCLTech, UWA launch global micro-credential programs in AI and cybersecurity

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 5 Dec 2025 HCLTech and The University of Western Australia (UWA) have announced a collaboration to co-develop...

LTTS transforms respiratory care with NVIDIA AI digital twin

LTTS transforms respiratory care with NVIDIA AI digital twin

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 1 Dec 2025 L&T Technology Services reported the development of a next-gen AI-powered digital twin platform for...

Capgemini’s €299 M staff buy-in hits new high of 100k participants

Capgemini’s €299 M staff buy-in hits new high of 100k participants

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 30 Nov 2025 For Aiman Ezzat, Chief Executive Officer of the Capgemini Group: “With this new employee...

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining
Media Release

NMDC–IIT Kanpur collaboration to drive digital innovation in mining

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 7 Dec 2025 In a landmark step towards strengthening industry-academia collaboration, NMDC, India’s largest iron ore producer,...

Read moreDetails
Brightcom Group Ltd – Results summary & share price overview
Market

Brightcom Group Ltd – Results summary & share price overview

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 7 Dec 2025 Brightcom Group Ltd is currently trading at ₹11.40, positioned between its 52-month high of...

Read moreDetails
Paradip Port handles significant crude oil traffic, five vessels expected next week
Commodity

Iron ore shipments at Indian major ports dip marginally during April-November

0

Debasis Mohapatra Bengaluru, 7 Dec 2025 Iron ore shipments in Indian ports fell by 2.25% to 31.6 million tonnes during...

Read moreDetails
IndiGo signals strong recovery — What’s next?
News

IndiGo signals strong recovery — What’s next?

0

DBT Bureau Pune, 7 Dec 2025 IndiGo has submitted a Press Statement to the stock exchanges, confirming significant operational improvements...

Read moreDetails
DBT Bureau

Data Biz Times © 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Navigate Site

  • Media Release
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Media Release
  • Data Story
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Artificial Intelligence

Data Biz Times © 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?