A Potential Quantum Leap
December 5, 2025
RQS Senior Investigator Michael Gullans is part of multi-institutional team that demonstrated a “fault tolerant” system using 448 atomic quantum bits.
The dream of creating game-changing quantum computers—supermachines that encode information in single atoms rather than conventional bits—has been hampered by the formidable challenge known as quantum error correction.
In a paper recently published in Nature, researchers from Harvard University, the University of Maryland and other institutions demonstrated a new system capable of detecting and removing errors below a key performance threshold, potentially providing a workable solution to the problem.
“For the first time, we combined all essential elements for a scalable, error-corrected quantum computation in an integrated architecture,” said Mikhail Lukin, co-director of the Quantum Science and Engineering Initiative, Joshua and Beth Friedman University Professor, and senior author of the new paper. “These experiments—by several measures the most advanced that have been done on any quantum platform to date—create the scientific foundation for practical large-scale quantum computation.”
In their paper, the team demonstrated a “fault tolerant” system using 448 atomic quantum bits manipulated with an intricate sequence of techniques to detect and correct errors.
The key mechanisms include physical entanglement, logical entanglement, logical magic, and entropy removal. For example, the system employs the trick of “quantum teleportation”—transferring the quantum state of one particle to another elsewhere without physical contact.
Michael Gullans, a senior investigator in the NSF Quantum Leap Challenge Institute for Robust Quantum Simulation who co-leads the research challenge of quantum simulations facing the environment, was a co-author of the study.
Gullans is also a physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Fellow in the Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science (QuICS), and an adjunct assistant professor of physics at the University of Maryland with an adjunct appointment in the University of Maryland Institute for Advanced Computer Studies (UMIACS).
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Michael Gullans
RC2 Co-Lead

