NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
TrumpTariffTradeLaunchAnnouncePricesStrikesMajorFebruaryChinaMarketCourtNewsDigestSundayTimelineHongKongServiceMilitaryTechSafetyGlobalOil
TrumpTariffTradeLaunchAnnouncePricesStrikesMajorFebruaryChinaMarketCourtNewsDigestSundayTimelineHongKongServiceMilitaryTechSafetyGlobalOil
All Articles
New Scientist
Published 18 days ago

Record-breaking quantum simulator could unlock new materials

New Scientist · Feb 4, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

An array of 15,000 qubits made from phosphorus and silicon offers an unprecedentedly large platform for simulating quantum materials such as perfect conductors of electricity

Full Article

Physics An array of 15,000 qubits made from phosphorus and silicon offers an unprecedentedly large platform for simulating quantum materials such as perfect conductors of electricity By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan 4 February 2026 Facebook / Meta Twitter / X icon Linkedin Reddit Email An artist’s representation of qubits in the Quantum Twins simulatorSilicon Quantum Computing An unprecedently large quantum simulator could shed light on how exotic, potentially useful quantum materials work and help us optimise them in the future. Quantum computers may eventually harness quantum phenomena to complete calculations that are intractable for the world’s best conventional computers. Similarly, a simulator harnessing quantum phenomena could help researchers to accurately model poorly understood materials or molecules. This is especially true for materials such as superconductors, which conduct electricity with nearly perfect efficiency, because they derive this property from quantum effects that could be directly implemented on quantum simulators but would require more steps of mathematical translation on conventional devices. Michelle Simmons at Silicon Quantum Computing in Australia and her colleagues have now created the biggest quantum simulator for quantum materials yet, called Quantum Twins. “The scale and controllability we have achieved with these simulators means we are now poised to tackle some very interesting problems,” she says. “We are designing new materials in previously unthought-of ways by literally building their analogues atom by atom.” The researchers built several simulators by embedding atoms of phosphorus into silicon chips. Each atom became a quantum bit, or qubit, which is the basic building block of quantum computers and simulators, and the team could precisely arrange the qubits into different grids that emulated atoms’ arrangement in real materials. Each iteration of Quantum Twins was made up of a square grid of 15,000 qubits – more than any previous quantum simulator. Similar qubit arrays have previously been created from, for example, several thousands of extremely cold atoms. Through this patterning process and by adding electronic components to each chip, the researchers also controlled properties of electrons in the chip. This mimicked controlling electrons in simulated materials, which is crucial for understanding, for instance, the flow of electricity within them. For example, the researchers could tune how difficult it would be to add an electron to any point in the grid or how difficult it would be for an electron to “hop” between two points. Simmons says conventional computers struggle with simulating large two-dimensional systems, as well as certain combinations of electrons’ properties, but Quantum Twins simulators have shown promise for those cases. She and her team tested their chips by simulating a transition between metallic (or conducting) and insulating behaviour of a famous mathematical model for how “dirt” in a material can affect its ability to support electric currents. They also measured the system’s “Hall coefficient” as a function of temperature, which captures how the simulated material behaves when exposed to magnetic fields. The size of the devices used in the experiment and the team’s ability to control variables mean Quantum Twins simulators could go on to tackle unconventional superconductors next, says Simmons. How conventional superconductors work at the level of their electrons is relatively well understood, but they must be made extremely cold or put under tremendous pressure to superconduct, which is impractical. Some superconductors can work in milder conditions, but to engineer them to function at room temperature and pressure, researchers need to understand them more microscopically – the kind of understanding that quantum simulators could offer in the future. Additionally, Quantum Twins could be used to study interfaces between different metals and molecules similar to polyacetylene that could be useful for drug development or artificial photosynthesis devices, says Simmons. Topics:


Share this story

Read Original at New Scientist

Related Articles

New Scientist2 days ago
Fish-based pet food may expose cats and dogs to forever chemicals

A survey of 100 commercial foods for dogs and cats revealed that PFAS chemicals appear in numerous brands and types, with fish-based products among those with the highest levels

New Scientist2 days ago
We've spotted the strongest microwave laser in the known universe

Colliding galaxies can create a beam of focused microwave radiation known as a maser, and astronomers have discovered the brightest one ever seen

New Scientist2 days ago
Fresh understanding of the causes of migraine reveals new drug targets

New insights into the causes of migraine is prompting a fresh look at a drug target that was sidelined 25 years ago

New Scientist2 days ago
Search for radio signals finds no hint of alien civilisation on K2-18b

Planet K2-18b, an apparent water world 124 light years away, has been seen as a promising location in the search for aliens, but telescopes on Earth failed to pick up any radio transmissions

New Scientist2 days ago
Ultra-processed foods could be making you age faster

We’ve been missing an important contributor to ageing, says columnist Graham Lawton. Ultra-processed foods are known to be associated with many chronic health problems, but studies have now shown they may also speed up ageing

New Scientist3 days ago
New fossils may settle debate over mysterious sail-backed spinosaurs

Spinosaurs have sometimes been portrayed as swimmers or divers, but a new species of these dinosaurs bolsters the idea that they were more like gigantic herons