UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) has acquired the government’s first quantum computer
(BBC) Liv McMahon, from the BBC’s technology team reports that the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) has acquired the government’s first quantum computer. IQT-News summarizes below.
The MoD will work with British company Orca Computing to explore applications for quantum technology in defence. Stephen Till, of the MoD’s Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (DSTL), called it a “milestone moment”.
Richard Murray, chief executive of Orca Computing, says despite debate over the realities and capabilities of quantum computing, the company’s work with the MoD is a “significant vote of confidence”.
“Our partnership with MoD gives us the type of hands-on close interaction, working with real hardware which will help us to jointly discover new applications of this revolutionary new technology.”
Prof Winfried Hensinger, head of the Sussex Centre for Quantum Technologies at University of Sussex, says the true potential of quantum computers will take time to fully materialise. “They can’t actually solve any any practical problems yet. They’re enabling you to maybe gauge the possibilities of what working on a quantum computer would have if you can scale this machine to really large system sizes.”
But he adds the promise of quantum computing, and the MoD’s exploration of it, is still significant.
“Quantum computing can be disruptive in nearly any industry sector,” Prof Hensinger adds. “You can imagine that within defence, there’s a lot of problems where optimisation can play a huge and very important role.”
The MoD will work with Orca’s small PT-1 quantum computer, which the company says is the first of its kind to be able to operate at room temperature, rather than require sub-zero surroundings to keep heat-sensitive qubits cool. Orca’s system uses photons, or single units of light, to optimise machine learning tasks like image analysis and decision-making.
Mr Till says having access to Orca’s quantum computer will accelerate the MoD’s understanding of the technology.
Sandra K. Helsel, Ph.D. has been researching and reporting on frontier technologies since 1990. She has her Ph.D. from the University of Arizona.