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Rose's law

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A quantum simulator based on 11 superconducting qubits

Rose's law is the observation that the number of qubits on chips doubles about every 18 months. It is the quantum computing equivalent of Moore's law.

The term was coined by Steve Jurvetson when he met Geordie Rose, the founder of D-Wave Systems and the law's namesake.

References

  1. Rose, Geordie (8 August 2022). "An Amazing Journey: Pictures from D-Wave's Early Days".
  2. Roses, Mor M.; Landa, Haggai; Dalla Torre, Emanuele G. (2021-09-30). "Simulating long-range hopping with periodically driven superconducting qubits". Physical Review Research. 3 (3): 033288. arXiv:2102.09590. Bibcode:2021PhRvR...3c3288R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.033288. ISSN 2643-1564. S2CID 231979524.
  3. Nike, Tanburn, Richard Okada, Emile Dattani (2015-08-19). Reducing multi-qubit interactions in adiabatic quantum computation without adding auxiliary qubits. Part 1: The "deduc-reduc" method and its application to quantum factorization of numbers. OCLC 1106223565.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Dormehl, Luke (2020-12-14). "IBM's Ambitious Million-Qubit Quantum Computer Plan". Digital Trends. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  5. "Quantum computing Rose's Law is Moore's Law on steroids". 31 August 2016.
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