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California county recalls top official, giving militia-aligned group a path to government – The Guardian

Voters in far northern California have solidified the ouster of a Republican county official, giving control of the Shasta county board of supervisors to a group supported by local militia members.

Leonard Moty, a retired police chief and Republican with decades of public service, lost his seat in a recall election in one of Californias most conservative counties. The Tuesday recall came as tensions reached a high in the county after two years of threats and increasing hostility toward moderate Republican officials over pandemic health restrictions.

I really thought my community would step up to the plate and they didnt and thats very discouraging, Moty said in an interview with the Guardian earlier this week, warning the recall would shift the area to the alt-right.

Updated polling numbers released on Friday showed about 56% of 8,752 voters supported recalling Moty. Cathy Darling Allen, the county registrar of voters, said there were about 121 ballots left to count. The results wont be finalized until next month, but the two candidates in the lead to replace Moty attended a celebration on Tuesday with members of an area militia group, the Sacramento Bee reported.

The recall is a win for the countys ultra-conservative movement in their efforts to gain a foothold in local government in this rural part of northern California and fight back against moderate Republicans they felt didnt do enough to resist state health rules during the pandemic.

Though Shasta county was among the least restrictive in California amid Covid, residents unhappy about state rules and mask requirements have showed up to meetings in large numbers since 2020. Moty and others were subjected to what law enforcement has deemed credible threats and personal attacks in meetings one person told him that bullets are expensive, but ropes are reusable.

Experts have warned the pandemic and eroding trust in US institutions has fueled extremism in local politics and hostility against officials. In Shasta county, the successful recall campaign will likely set up more conflict between the local government and the state government, said Lisa Pruitt, a rural law expert at the University of California, Davis.

Carlos Zapata, a local militia member who helped organize the recall efforts, in 2020 told the board there could be blood in the streets if the supervisors didnt reject state health rules such as mask requirements.

This is a warning for whats coming. Its not going to be peaceful much longer. Its going to be real Ive been in combat and I never wanted to go back again, but Im telling you what I will to stay in this country. If it has to be against our own citizens, it will happen. And theres a million people like me, and you wont stop us, he said.

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California county recalls top official, giving militia-aligned group a path to government - The Guardian

Study Estimates Global Quantum Computing Market Earned $490M in 2021 – HPCwire

ST. PAUL, Minn.,Feb. 4, 2022 A new study conducted by Hyperion Research and sponsored by the Quantum Economic Development Consortium (QED-C) and QC Ware with assistance from the European Quantum Industry Consortium and Quantum Industry Canada today announced that the global quantum computing (QC) market earned an estimated $490 millionin 2021. The market is anticipated to expand at an annual rate of 21.9 percent through 2024.

The estimate is strongly data-driven, drawn from a survey of 112 quantum computing vendors headquartered inNorth America,Europe, the Asia/Pacific Region, and theMiddle East. Survey respondents spanned the range of the QC ecosystem, including QC algorithm and QC application software developers, QC hardware developers and product providers, and QC venture capital organizations.

This newest market study confirms that the global quantum computing sector will exhibit stable and robust growth for at least the next few years. A growing list of QC-end users around the world likely will continue to fuel such growth, attracted by the increasing base of new and innovative QC- based applications and use cases critical to their overall advanced computing requirements, according toBob Sorensen, Chief Analyst for Quantum Computing, Hyperion Research.

Additional insights from the study included:

This study is the second annual QC market forecast by Hyperion Research and underwritten by QED-C and QC Ware. The findings, which were recently presented at the 2021 Q2B conference, will help inform decisions made by QC developers interested in rapidly changing QC market trends and opportunities; national-level policymakers tasked with QC-related R&D funding support, procurement policies, trade, and QC-specific security consideration; current and future QC end-users looking to gauge the pace and progress of the sector; and various corporate and venture capital entities assessing the technology and market potential of the sector. Regular updates to these studies will track the growth of the QC industry and help vendors, investors, and policymakers understand the evolving landscape of the quantum computing ecosystem. Future studies will be presented at the annual Q2B conference, held in the second week of December inCalifornia.

Celia Merzbacher, Executive Director of QED-C said, This data-driven study provides a snapshot of where the industry is now and where it is headed in the next three to five years. With broader coverage compared to the survey one year ago, the consistent results year-over-year provide added confidence in the results.

We believe that building practical quantum computing applications, which is our main mission, is not a zero-sum game, said Yianni Gamvros, Head of Business Development, QC Ware. QC Ware is actively investing and cares deeply about the health of the entire quantum computing ecosystem. Support for this report is one of many community initiatives that we are undertaking to ensure the entire space is healthy, transparent, and growing as quickly as possible.

About Quantum Economic Development Consortium

The Quantum Economic Development Consortium (QED-C) is an industry-driven consortium managed by SRI International with the mission to support a robust U.S. QIST industry and related supply chain. QED-C is supported by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the U.S. Department of Commerce and more than 160 members, including more than 110 U.S. corporations from across the quantum supply chain including component suppliers/manufacturers, software and hardware system developers, service providers and end users. Visit https://quantumconsortium.org.

About QC Ware

QC Wareis a quantum software and services company focused on ensuring enterprises are prepared for the emerging quantum computing disruption. QC Ware specializes in thedevelopment of applications for near-term quantum computing hardware with a team composed of some of the industrys foremost experts in quantum computing. Its growing network of customers includes AFRL, Aisin Group, Airbus, BMW Group, Equinor, Goldman Sachs, and Total. QC Ware Forge, the companys flagship quantum computing cloud service, is built for data scientists with no quantum computing background. It provides unique, performant, turnkey quantum computing algorithms. QC Ware is headquartered inPalo Alto, California, and supports its European customers through its subsidiary inParis. QC Ware also organizes Q2B, the largest annual gathering of the international quantum computing community. Visit https://www.qcware.com.

About Hyperion Research

Hyperion Research provides data-driven research, analysis and recommendations for technologies, applications, and markets in high performance computing and emerging technology areas, such as quantum computing, to help organizations worldwide make effective decisions and seize growth opportunities. Research includes market sizing and forecasting, share tracking, segmentation, technology, and related trend analysis, and both user and vendor analysis for technical server technology used for traditional HPC, high performance data analysis, and AI workloads.Bob Sorensen(bsorensen@hyperionres.com) is Chief Analyst for Quantum Computing. Visit https://hyperionresearch.com.

Source: Hyperion Research

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Study Estimates Global Quantum Computing Market Earned $490M in 2021 - HPCwire

In Partnership with IBM, Canada to Get Its First Universal Quantum Computer – HPCwire

IBM today announced it will deploy its first quantum computer in Canada, putting Canada on a short list of countries that will have access to an IBM Quantum System One machine. The Canadian province of Quebec is partnering with IBM to establish the Quebec-IBM Discovery Accelerator to advance R&D within the fields of quantum computing, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and high-performance computing.

The collaboration will lay the foundation for novel energy materials and life science discoveries, according to the partners. The new technology hub is also focused on STEM education and skills development with an emphasis on supporting genomics and drug discovery.

The IBM Quantum System One is expected to be up and running at IBMs facility in Bromont, Quebec, by early next year, said Anthony Annunziata, IBMs director of accelerated discovery, in an interview with Reuters. IBM said the partnership will leverage the companys knowledge of semiconductor design and packaging.

The Quebec-IBM Discovery Accelerator is further proof of our commitment to building open communities of innovation to tackle the big problems of our time through a combination of quantum computing, AI and high-performance computing, all integrated through the hybrid cloud, said Dr. Daro Gil, senior vice president and director of Research, IBM.

The dedicated IBM quantum computer will pave the way for us to make incredible progress in areas such as artificial intelligence and modeling, said Franois Legault, Premier of Quebec. Quantum science is the future of computing. With our innovation zone, were positioning ourselves at the forefront of this future.

IBM has in the last twelve months announced similar partnerships with the Cleveland Clinic, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the UKs Science and Technology Facilities Council Hartree Centre. The Canadian Quantum One system marks the fifth global installation that IBM has announced, following engagements in the U.S., Germany, Japan and South Korea.

Canada has made quantum computing a high-priority research target, seeking to hone its technical and strategic edge in the global marketplace. A year ago, the government of Canada extended a $40-million contribution to quantum computing firm D-Wave Systems Inc. as part of a larger $120 million investment in quantum computing technologies. (Based in British Columbia, D-Wave has long championed quantum annealing-based quantum computing, but recently announced it was expanding into gate-based quantum computing.)

While IBM has primarily provided its quantum computing platform as a service, the company launched the IBM Quantum System One in 2019 as an on-premises offering, billed as the worlds first fully integrated universal quantum computing system.

Related:

IBM Quantum Update: Q System One Launch, New Collaborators, and QC Center Plans

IBM Bringing Quantum on-Prem for Cleveland Clinic

IBM Joins Effort to Build $200M AI, Cloud, Quantum Discovery Accelerator at the University of Illinois

Fraunhofer Goes Quantum: IBMs Quantum System One Comes to Europe

IBM and University of Tokyo Roll Out Quantum System One in Japan

IBM and Yonsei University Unveil Collaboration to Bring IBM Quantum System One to Korea

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In Partnership with IBM, Canada to Get Its First Universal Quantum Computer - HPCwire

Jian-Wei Pan: The next quantum breakthrough will happen in five years – EL PAS in English

Any leap in quantum computing multiplies the potential of a technology capable of performing calculations and simulations that are beyond the scope of current computers while facilitating the study of phenomena that have been only theoretical to date.

Last year, a group of researchers put forward the idea in the journal Nature that an alternative to quantum theory based on real numbers can be experimentally falsified. The original proposal was a challenge that has been taken up by the leading scientist in the field, Jian-Wei Pan, with the participation of physicist Adn Cabello, from the University of Seville. Their combined research has demonstrated the indispensable role of complex numbers [square root of minus one, for example] in standard quantum mechanics. The results allow progress to be made in the development of computers that use this technology and, according to Cabello, to test quantum physics in regions that have previously been inaccessible.

Jian-Wei Pan, 51, a 1987 graduate of the Science and Technology University of China (USTC) and a PhD graduate of Vienna University, leads one of the largest and most successful quantum research teams in the world, and has been described by physics Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek as a force of nature. Jian-Wei Pans thesis supervisor at the University of Vienna, physicist Anton Zeilinger, added: I cannot imagine the emergence of quantum technology without Jian-Wei Pan.

Pans leadership in the research has been fundamental. The experiment can be seen as a game between two players: real-valued quantum mechanics versus complex-valued quantum mechanics, he explains. The game is played on a quantum computer platform with four superconducting circuits. By sending in random measurement bases and measuring the outcome, the game score is obtained which is a mathematical combination of the measurement bases and outcome. The rule of the game is that the real-valued quantum mechanics is ruled out if the game score exceeds 7.66, which is the case in our work.

Covered by the scientific journal Physical Review Letters, the experiment was developed by a team from USTC and the University of Seville to answer a fundamental question: Are complex numbers really necessary for the quantum mechanical description of nature? The results exclude an alternative to standard quantum physics that uses only real numbers.

According to Jian-Wei Pan: Physicists use mathematics to describe nature. In classical physics, a real number appears complete to describe the physical reality in all classical phenomenon, whereas a complex number is only sometimes employed as a convenient mathematical tool. However, whether the complex number is necessary to represent the theory of quantum mechanics is still an open question. Our results disprove the real-number description of nature and establish the indispensable role of a complex number in quantum mechanics.

Its not only of interest regarding excluding a specific alternative, Cabello adds, the importance of the experiment is that it shows how a system of superconducting qubits [those used in quantum computers] allows us to test predictions of quantum physics that are impossible to test with the experiments we have been carrying out until now. This opens up a very interesting range of possibilities, because there are dozens of fascinating predictions that we have never been able to test, since they require firm control over several qubits. Now we will be able to test them.

According to Chao-Yang Lu, of USTC and co-author of the experiment: The most promising near-term application of quantum computers is the testing of quantum mechanics itself and the study of many-body systems.

Thus, the discovery provides not only a way forward in the development of quantum computers, but also a new way of approaching nature to understand the behavior and interactions of particles at the atomic and subatomic level.

But, like any breakthrough, the opening of a new way forward generates uncertainties. However, Jian-Wei Pan prefers to focus on the positive: Building a practically useful fault-tolerant quantum computer is one of the great challenges for human beings, he says. I am more concerned about how and when we will build one. The most formidable challenge for building a large-scale universal quantum computer is the presence of noise and imperfections. We need to use quantum error correction and fault-tolerant operations to overcome the noise and scale up the system. A logical qubit with higher fidelity than a physical qubit will be the next breakthrough in quantum computing and will occur in about five years. In homes, quantum computers would, if realized, be available first through cloud services.

According to Cabello, when quantum computers are sufficiently large and have thousands or millions of qubits, they will make it possible to understand complex chemical reactions that will help to design new drugs and better batteries; perform simulations that lead to the development of new materials and calculations that make it possible to optimize artificial intelligence and machine learning algorithms used in logistics, cybersecurity and finance, or to decipher the codes on which the security of current communications is based.

Quantum computers, he adds, use the properties of quantum physics to perform calculations. Unlike the computers we use, in which the basic unit of information is the bit [which can take two values], in a quantum computer, the basic unit is the quantum bit, or qubit, which has an infinite number of states.

Cabello goes on to say that the quantum computers built by companies such as Google, IBM or Rigetti take advantage of the fact that objects the size of a micron and produced using standard semiconductor-manufacturing techniques can behave like qubits.

The goal of having computers with millions of qubits is still a long way off, since most current quantum computers, according to Cabello, only have a few qubits and not all of them are good enough. However, the results of the Chinese and Spanish teams research make it possible to expand the uses of existing computers and to understand physical phenomena that have puzzled scientists for years.

For example, Google Quantum AI has published the observation of a time crystal through the Sycamore quantum processor for the first time in the Nature journal. A quantum time crystal is similar to a grain of salt composed of sodium and chlorine atoms. However, while the layers of atoms in that grain of salt form a physical structure based on repeating patterns in space, in the time crystal the structure is configured from an oscillating pattern. The Google processor has been able to observe these oscillatory wave patterns of stable time crystals.

This finding, according to Pedram Roushan and Kostyantyn Kechedzhi, shows how quantum processors can be used to study new physical phenomena. Moving from theory to actual observation is a critical leap and is the basis of any scientific discovery. Research like this opens the door to many more experiments, not only in physics, but hopefully inspires future quantum applications in many other fields.

In Spain, a consortium of seven companies Amatech, BBVA bank, DAS Photonics, GMV, Multiverse computing, Qilimanjaro Quantum Tech and Repsol and five research centers Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Donostia International Physics Center (DIPC), The Institute of Photonic Sciences (ICFO), Tecnalia and the Polytechnic University of Valencia (UPV) have launched a new project called CUCO to apply quantum computing to Spanish strategic industries: energy, finance, space, defense and logistics.

Subsidized by the Center for the Development of Industrial Technology (CDTI) and with the support of the Ministry of Science and Innovation, the CUCO project, is the first major quantum computing initiative in Spain in the business field and aims to advance the scientific and technological knowledge of quantum computing algorithms through public-private collaboration between companies, research centers and universities. The goal is for this technology to be implemented in the medium-term future.

English version by Heather Galloway.

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Jian-Wei Pan: The next quantum breakthrough will happen in five years - EL PAS in English

Multiverse Computing and Xanadu Partner on Quantum Software for Finance – insideHPC – insideHPC

TORONTO and SAN SEBASTIN, SPAIN Multiverse Computing, a maker of quantum computing software for the financial industry, and Xanadu, a full-stack photonic quantum computing company, announced today a joint partnership to expand Multiverses use of Xanadus open source software, PennyLane.

The partnership will enable Multiverses financial services clients to develop applications with greater speed and ease. These applications will enhance financial and banking intelligence in areas ranging from risk modeling to market forecasting.Led by Xanadus world-renowned team of scientists and developers, PennyLane has built a large and passionate following since its initial release three years ago.

PennyLane connects the most popular quantum computing platforms with the best machine learning tools using a device-agnostic and open-source approach, allowing users to train quantum computers the same way as neural networks.

With PennyLane at the core of Multiverses product suite, our financial services clients will gain access to tools and best practices in quantum programming, backed by one of the worlds largest open-source quantum communities, said Samuel Mugel, CTO ofMultiverse Computing. We see PennyLane as a critical tool for validating our product efforts, enhancing our ability to rapidly test and deploy new quantum capabilities across our financial user community.

We continue to see broader adoption of PennyLane with innovative startups like Multiverse. Xanadus open-source software is an excellent vehicle for accelerating development and reducing the time to market for new quantum products, said Rafal Janik, Xanadus Head of Product. The collective knowledge of Multiverses scientists and their clients provides feedback benefiting the broader open-source community and improving PennyLane.

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Multiverse Computing and Xanadu Partner on Quantum Software for Finance - insideHPC - insideHPC