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ĢƵ achieves moonshot years ahead of schedule, demonstrating fault-tolerant high-fidelity teleportation of a logical qubit

September 20, 2024

While it sounds like a gadget from Star Trek, teleportation is real – and it is happening at ĢƵ. In in Science, our researchers moved a quantum state from one place to another without physically moving it through space - and they accomplished this feat with fault-tolerance and excellent fidelity. This is an important milestone for the whole quantum computing community and the latest example of ĢƵ achieving critical milestones years ahead of expectations. 

While it seems exotic, teleportation is a critical piece of technology needed for full scale fault-tolerant quantum computing, and it is used widely in algorithm and architecture design. In addition to being essential on its own, teleportation has historically been used to demonstrate a high level of system maturity. The protocol requires multiple qubits, high-fidelity state-preparation, single-qubit operations, entangling operations, mid-circuit measurement, and conditional operations, making it an excellent system-level benchmark.

Our team was motivated to do this work by the US Government Intelligence Advance Research Projects Activity (IARPA), who set a challenge to perform high fidelity teleportation with the goal of advancing the state of science in universal fault-tolerant quantum computing. IARPA further specified that the entanglement and teleportation protocols must also maintain fault-tolerance, a key property that keeps errors local and correctable. 

These ambitious goals required developing highly complex systems, protocols, and other infrastructure to enable exquisite control and operation of quantum-mechanical hardware. We are proud to have accomplished these goals ahead of schedule, demonstrating the flexibility, performance, and power of ĢƵ’s Quantum Charge Coupled Device (QCCD) architecture.

ĢƵ’s demonstration marks the first time that an arbitrary quantum state has been teleported at the logical level (using a quantum error correcting code). This means that instead of teleporting the quantum state of a single physical qubit we have teleported the quantum information encoded in an entangled set of physical qubits, known as a logical qubit. In other words, the collective state of a bunch of qubits is teleported from one set of physical qubits to another set of physical qubits. This is, in a sense, a lot closer to what you see in Star Trek – they teleport the state of a big collection of atoms at once. Except for the small detail of coming up with a pile of matter with which to reconstruct a human body...

This is also the first demonstration of a fully fault-tolerant version of the state teleportation circuit using real-time quantum error correction (QEC), decoding mid-circuit measurement of syndromes and implementing corrections during the protocol. It is critical for computers to be able to catch and correct any errors that happen along the way, and this is not something other groups have managed to do in any robust sense. In addition, our team achieved the result with high fidelity (97.5%±0.2%), providing a powerful demonstration of the quality of our H2 quantum processor, Powered by Honeywell.

Our team also tried several variations of logical teleportation circuits, using both transversal gates and lattice surgery protocols, thanks to the flexibility of our QCCD architecture. This marks the first demonstration of lattice surgery performed on a QEC code.

Lattice surgery is a strategy for implementing logical gates that requires only 2D nearest-neighbor interactions, making it especially useful for architectures whose qubit locations are fixed, such as superconducting architectures. QCCD and other technologies that do not have fixed qubit positioning might employ this method, another method, or some mixture. We are fortunate that our QCCD architecture allows us to explore the use of different logical gating options so that we can optimize our choices for experimental realities.

While the teleportation demonstration is the big result, sometimes it is the behind-the-scenes technology advancements that make the big differences. The experiments in this paper were designed at the logical level using an internally developed logical-level programming language dubbed Simple Logical Representation (SLR). This is yet another marker of our system’s maturity – we are no longer programming at the physical level but have instead moved up one “layer of abstraction”. Someday, all quantum algorithms will need to be run on the logical level with rounds of quantum error correction. This is a markedly different state than most present experiments, which are run on the physical level without quantum error correction. It is also worth noting that these results were generated using the software stack available to any user of ĢƵ’s H-Series quantum computers, and these experiments were run alongside customer jobs – underlining that these results are commercial performance, not hero data on a bespoke system.

Ironically, a key element in this work is our ability to move our qubits through space the “normal” way - this capacity gives us all-to-all connectivity, which was essential for some of the QEC protocols used in the complex task of fault-tolerant logical teleportation. .

About ĢƵ

ĢƵ, the world’s largest integrated quantum company, pioneers powerful quantum computers and advanced software solutions. ĢƵ’s technology drives breakthroughs in materials discovery, cybersecurity, and next-gen quantum AI. With over 500 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, ĢƵ leads the quantum computing revolution across continents. 

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March 25, 2026
Celebrating Our First Annual Q-Net Connect!

This month, ĢƵ welcomed its global user community to the first-ever Q-Net Connect, an annual forum designed to spark collaboration, share insights, and accelerate innovation across our full-stack quantum computing platforms. Over two days, users came together not only to learn from one another, but to build the relationships and momentum that we believe will help define the next chapter of quantum computing.

Q-Net Connect 2026 drew over 170 attendees from around the world to Denver, Colorado, including representatives from commercial enterprises and startups, academia and research institutions, and the public sector and non-profits - all users of ĢƵ systems.  

The program was packed with inspiring keynotes, technical tracks, and customer presentations. Attendees heard from leaders at ĢƵ, as well as our partners at NVIDIA, JPMorganChase and BlueQubit; professors from the University of New Mexico, the University of Nottingham and Harvard University; national labs, including NIST, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories and Los Alamos National Laboratory; and other distinguished guests from across the global quantum ecosystem.

Congratulations to Q-Net Connect 2026 Award Recipients! 

The mission of the ĢƵ Q-Net user community is to create a space for shared learning, collaboration and connection for those who adopt ĢƵ’s hardware, software and middleware platform. At this year’s Q-Net Connect, we awarded four organizations who made notable efforts to champion this effort. 

  • JPMorganChase received the ‘Guppy Adopter Award’ for their exemplary adoption of our quantum programming language, Guppy, in their research workflows. 
  • Phasecraft, a UK and US-based quantum algorithms startup, received the ‘Rising Star’ award for demonstrating exceptional early impact and advancing science using ĢƵ hardware, which they published in a December 2025 .
  • Qedma, a quantum software startup, received the ‘Startup Partner Engagement’ award for their sustained engagement with ĢƵ platforms dating back to our first commercially deployed quantum computer, H1.
  • Anna Dalmasso from the University of Nottingham received our ‘New Student Award’ for her impressive debut project on ĢƵ hardware and for delivering outstanding results as a new Q-Net student user. 

Congratulations, again, and thank you to everyone who contributed to the success of the first Q-Net Connect!

Become a Q-Net Member

Q-Net offers year‑round support through user access, developer tools, documentation, trainings, webinars, and events. Members enjoy many exclusive benefits, including being the first to hear about exclusive content, publications and promotional offers.

By joining the community, you will be invited to exclusive gatherings to hear about the latest breakthroughs and connect with industry experts driving quantum innovation. Members also get access to Q‑Net Connect recordings and stay connected for future community updates.

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March 16, 2026
We’re Using AI to Discover New Quantum Algorithms

In a follow-up to our recent work with Hiverge using AI to discover algorithms for quantum chemistry, we’ve teamed up with Hiverge, Amazon Web Services (AWS) and NVIDIA to explore using AI to improve algorithms for combinatorial optimization.

With the rapid rise of Large Language Models (LLMs), people started asking “what if AI agents can serve as on-demand algorithm factories?” We have been working with Hiverge, an algorithm discovery company, AWS, and NVIDIA, to explore how LLMs can accelerate quantum computing research.

Hiverge – named for Hive, an AI that can develop algorithms – aims to make quantum algorithm design more accessible to researchers by translating high-level problem descriptions in mostly natural language into executable quantum circuits. The Hive takes the researcher’s initial sketch of an algorithm, as well as special constraints the researcher enumerates, and evolves it to a new algorithm that better meets the researcher’s needs. The output is expressed in terms of a familiar programming language, like Guppy or , making it particularly easy to implement.

The AI is called a “Hive” because it is a collective of LLM agents, all of whom are editing the same codebase. In this work, the Hive was made up of LLM powerhouses such as Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude, Llama, as well as which was accessed through AWS’ Amazon Bedrock service. Many models are included because researchers know that diversity is a strength – just like a team of human researchers working in a group, a variety of perspectives often leads to the strongest result.

Once the LLMs are assembled, the Hive calls on them to do the work writing the desired algorithm; no new training is required. The algorithms are then executed and their ‘fitness’ (how well they solve the problem) is measured. Unfit programs do not survive, while the fittest ones evolve to the next generation. This process repeats, much like the evolutionary process of nature itself.

After evolution, the fittest algorithm is selected by the researchers and tested on other instances of the problem. This is a crucial step as the researchers want to understand how well it can generalize.

In this most recent work, the joint team explored how AI can assist in the discovery of heuristic quantum optimization algorithms, a class of algorithms aimed at improving efficiency across critical workstreams. These span challenges like optimal power grid dispatch and storage placement, arranging fuel inside nuclear reactors, and molecular design and reaction pathway optimization in drug, material, and chemical discovery—where solutions could translate into maximizing operational efficiency, dramatic reduction in costs, and rapid acceleration in innovation.

In other AI approaches, such as reinforcement learning, models are trained to solve a problem, but the resulting "algorithm" is effectively ‘hidden’ within a neural network. Here, the algorithm is written in Guppy or CUDA-Q (or Python), making it human-interpretable and easier to deploy on new problem instances.

This work leveraged the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform, running on powerful NVIDIA GPUs made accessible by AWS. It’s state-of-the art accelerated computing was crucial; the research explored highly complex problems, challenges that lie at the edge of classical computing capacity. Before running anything on ĢƵ’s quantum computer, the researchers first used NVIDIA accelerated computing to simulate the quantum algorithms and assess their fitness. Once a promising algorithm is discovered, it could then be deployed on quantum hardware, creating an exciting new approach for scaling quantum algorithm design.

More broadly, this work points to one of many ways in which classical compute, AI, and quantum computing are most powerful in symbiosis. AI can be used to improve quantum, as demonstrated here, just as quantum can be used to extend AI. Looking ahead, we envision AI evolving programs that express a combination of algorithmic primitives, much like human mathematicians, such as Peter Shor and Lov Grover, have done. After all, both humans and AI can learn from each other.

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March 16, 2026
Real Time Error Correction at Increased Scale

As quantum computing power grows, so does the difficulty of error correction. Meeting that demand requires tight integration with high-performance classical computing, which is why we’ve partnered with NVIDIA to push the boundaries of real-time decoding performance.

Realizing the full power of quantum computing requires more than just qubits, it requires error rates low enough to run meaningful algorithms at scale. Physical qubits are sensitive to noise, which limits their capacity to handle calculations beyond a certain scale. To move beyond these limits, physical qubits must be combined into logical qubits, with errors continuously detected and corrected in real time before they can propagate and corrupt the calculation. This approach, known as fault tolerance, is a foundational requirement for any quantum computer intended to solve problems of real-world significance.

Part of the challenge of fault tolerance is the computational complexity of correcting errors in real time. Doing so involves sending the error syndrome data to a classical co-processor, solving a complex mathematical problem on that processor, then sending the resulting correction back to the quantum processor - all fast enough that it doesn’t slow down the quantum computation. For this reason, Quantum Error Correction (QEC) is currently one of the most demanding use-cases for tight coupling between classical and quantum computing.

Given the difficulty of the task, we have partnered with NVIDIA, leaders in accelerated computing. With the help of NVIDIA’s ultra-fast GPUs (and the GPU-accelerated BP-OSD decoder developed by NVIDIA as part of library), we were able to demonstrate real-time decoding of Helios’ qubits, all in a system that can be connected directly to our quantum processors using .

While real-time decoding has been demonstrated before (notably, by our own scientists in this study), previous demonstrations were limited in their scalability and complexity.

In this demonstration, we used Brings’ code, a high-rate code that is possible with our all-to-all connectivity, to encode our physical qubits into noise-resilient logical qubits. Once we had them encoded, we ran gates as well as let them idle to see if we could catch and correct errors quickly and efficiently. We submitted the circuits via both as well as our own Guppy language, underlining our commitment to accessible, ecosystem-friendly quantum computing.

The results were excellent: we were able to perform low-latency decoding that returned results in the time we needed, even for the faster clock cycles that we expect in future generation machines.

A key part of the achievement here is that we performed something called “correlated” decoding. In correlated decoding, you offload work that would normally be performed on the QPU onto the classical decoder. This is because, in ‘standard’ decoding, as you improve your error correction capabilities, it takes more and more time on the QPU. Correlated decoding elides this cost, saving QPU time for the tasks that only the quantum computer can do.

Stay tuned for our forthcoming paper with all the details.

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