A group of physicists from Harvard and MIT just built a quantum computer that ran continuously for more than two hours. Although it doesn’t sound like much versus regular computers (like servers that run 24/7 for months, if not years), this is a huge breakthrough in quantum computing. As reported by The Harvard Crimson, most current quantum computers run for only a few milliseconds, with record-breaking machines only able to operate for a little over 10 seconds.

Although two hours is still a bit limited, researchers say that the concept behind this could allow future quantum computers to run for much longer, maybe even indefinitely. “There is still a way to go and scale from where we are now,” says research associate Tout T. Wang, “But the roadmap is now clear based on the breakthrough experiments that we’ve done here at Harvard.”

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The research team addressed this by developing the “optical lattice conveyor belt” and “optical tweezers” to replace qubits as they’re lost. This system has 3,000 qubits and allows them to inject 300,000 atoms per second into the quantum computer, overcoming the qubit loss. “There’s now fundamentally nothing limiting how long our usual atom and quantum computers can run for,” said Wang. “Even if atoms get lost with a small probability, we can bring fresh atoms in to replace them and not affect the quantum information being stored in the system.”

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