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.[1][2] It is the quantum computing equivalent of Moore's law.[3][4]

The term was coined by Steve Jurvetson when he met Geordie Rose, the founder of D-Wave Systems and the law's namesake.[5]

References[edit]

  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.