Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Friday, February 28 2020 - 08:00
AsiaNet
Cambridge Quantum Computing Announces Significant New Quantum Technology Collaboration With CERN
CAMBRIDGE, England, February 28, 2020, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Cambridge Quantum Computing ("CQC") announced today that it has joined CERN 
openlab in a collaboration - named the QUATERNION project - to explore the 
application of quantum technologies to particle physics. CQC is a global leader 
in the quantum industry with a deep commitment to the cultivation of world 
class scientific research.

"We are excited to collaborate with CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle 
Physics, on this innovative quantum computing based research project," said 
Ilyas Khan, Founder and CEO of CQC.  "CQC is focussed on using the world's best 
science to develop technologies for the coming quantum age. Joining CERN 
openlab is a special development for any organization and we look forward to 
developing advances together," he added. 

"Our unique public-private partnership works to accelerate the development of 
cutting-edge computing technologies for our research community," said Alberto 
Di Meglio, the Head of CERN openlab. "Quantum computing research is one of the 
most exciting areas of study today; we are pleased to welcome CQC and their 
world-class scientists into collaboration with us."
 
Researchers at CERN are exploring the potential offered by quantum computers. 
Their enhanced computational capabilities could help to improve the analysis 
and classification of their vast data sets, thus helping to push back the 
boundaries of particle physics. Working in collaboration with major hardware 
vendors and users of quantum computing, CERN openlab has launched a number of 
projects in this domain. To this end, the CERN openlab team will leverage the 
power of t|ket)™, CQC's proprietary quantum development platform.

CQC's t|ket)(TM) converts machine-independent quantum circuits into executable 
circuits, crucially reducing the number of required operations whilst 
optimising physical qubit arrangements. The architecture-agnostic nature of 
t|ket)(TM) will help the members of the CERN openlab project team to work 
across multiple platforms to achieve optimal results even on today's noisy 
quantum hardware. 

The QUATERNION project will also investigate the application of CQC's four 
qubit quantum technology device named Ironbridge(TM)* to CERN's Monte Carlo 
methods for data analysis. Such methods are not only a vital component of 
particle physics research, but are also applicable to many other areas, such as 
financial and climate modelling. Monte Carlo methods use high-quality entropy 
sources to simulate and analyse complex data. Using CQC's IronBridge(TM) 
platform, the world's first commercially available device-independent and 
quantum-certifiable cryptographic device, the teams will investigate for the 
first time the effects of certified entropy on Monte Carlo simulations. 

About Cambridge Quantum Computing 

Cambridge Quantum Computing (CQC) is a world-leading quantum computing software 
company with over 62 scientists including 37 PhD's across offices in Cambridge 
(UK), San Francisco, London and Tokyo. CQC builds tools for the 
commercialisation of quantum technologies that will have a profound global 
impact. CQC combines expertise in quantum software, specifically a quantum 
development platform (t|ket)™), enterprise applications in the areas of quantum 
chemistry (EUMEN), quantum machine learning (QML), and quantum augmented 
cybersecurity (IronBridge™). 

For more information about CQC, visit www.cambridgequantum.com 

* Trademark registration in UK and EU

SOURCE: Cambridge Quantum Computing (CQC)