Close Menu
Gun Range Day
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Defense
  • Hunting
  • Videos
What's Hot

Soldier Dies on Fort Leonard Wood Rifle Range

September 9, 2025

Supreme Court is asked to allow White House to block $4B in foreign aid

September 9, 2025

Transgender Military Kids Face ‘Profound Harm’ from Health Care Restrictions, Lawsuit Alleges

September 8, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Gun Range Day
  • Home
  • Guns
  • Defense
  • Hunting
  • Videos
Gun Range Day
Home » Oak Ridge is using diamonds to marry quantum, classical computers
Oak Ridge is using diamonds to marry quantum, classical computers
Defense

Oak Ridge is using diamonds to marry quantum, classical computers

Braxton TaylorBy Braxton TaylorSeptember 3, 20252 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Computers with components made of diamond are being installed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee in a bid to marry quantum information technologies with classical computers, the lab announced on Tuesday. 

Quantum science promises advances in fields from cryptography to chemistry, but realizing that promise depends on finding a way to connect quantum and classical systems. 

“By hosting a Quantum Brilliance system on site, we’ll be maturing the real mechanics of hybrid computing — co‑scheduling, end‑to‑end performance tuning, data and workflow orchestration, workforce development and more — so we can eventually move HPC-quantum integration from a conceptual pilot to a fully embedded capability within leadership computing,” said Ashley Barker, who directs Oak Ridge’s Leadership Computing Facility Program. 

Quantum Brilliance’s products use synthetic diamonds to ease the challenges of today’s quantum systems, such as external noise that introduces errors into quantum calculations.

“Diamond is extremely hard, so even at room temperature and atmospheric pressure, there isn’t sufficient thermal energy to generate the vibrations that would typically disrupt qubit coherence,” said CEO Mark Luo. “This intrinsic stability allows our QPUs to function without the complexity and cost of cryogenics, laser and vacuum systems. This allowed us to engineer a revolutionary QPU solution that operates efficiently at room temperature while dramatically reducing size, weight and power consumption.”

Oak Ridge is among the national labs working on quantum systems with companies and other federal entities.



Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Soldier Dies on Fort Leonard Wood Rifle Range

September 9, 2025

Supreme Court is asked to allow White House to block $4B in foreign aid

September 9, 2025

Transgender Military Kids Face ‘Profound Harm’ from Health Care Restrictions, Lawsuit Alleges

September 8, 2025

Trump orders up ‘secondary’ name for DOD: Department of War

September 8, 2025
Top Articles

Supreme Court is asked to allow White House to block $4B in foreign aid

September 9, 2025

Transgender Military Kids Face ‘Profound Harm’ from Health Care Restrictions, Lawsuit Alleges

September 8, 2025

Trump orders up ‘secondary’ name for DOD: Department of War

September 8, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearms news and updates directly to your inbox.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Gun Range Day. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.