Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Skip to main content
ScienceDaily
Your source for the latest research news
New! Sign up for our freeemail newsletter.
Science News
from research organizations

Photonic quantum chips are making AI smarter and greener

Date:
June 8, 2025
Source:
University of Vienna
Summary:
A team of researchers has shown that even small-scale quantum computers can enhance machine learning performance, using a novel photonic quantum circuit. Their findings suggest that today s quantum technology isn t just experimental it can already outperform classical systems in specific tasks. Notably, this photonic approach could also drastically reduce energy consumption, offering a sustainable path forward as machine learning s power needs soar.
Share:
FULL STORY

Tiny Quantum Chip Outsmarts Classical AI
Classification of data points can be performed through a photonic quantum computer, boosting the accuracy of conventional methods. Credit: Iris Agresti

One of the current hot research topics is the combination of two of the most recent technological breakthroughs: machine learning and quantum computing. An experimental study shows that already small-scale quantum computers can boost the performance of machine learning algorithms. This was demonstrated on a photonic quantum processor by an international team of researchers of the University of Vienna. The work, recently published inNature Photonics, shows promising new applications for optical quantum computers.

Recent scientific breakthroughs have reshaped the development of future technologies. On the one hand, machine learning and artificial intelligence have already revolutionized our lives from everyday tasks to scientific research. On the other hand, quantum computing has emerged as a new paradigm of computation.

From the combination of these promising two fields, a new research line has opened up: Quantum Machine Learning. This field aims at finding potential enhancements in the speed, efficiency or accuracy of algorithms when they run on quantum platforms. It is however still an open challenge, to achieve such an advantage on current technology quantum computers.

This is where an international team of researchers took the next step and designed a novel experiment carried out by scientists from the University of Vienna. The set-up features a quantum photonic circuit built at the Politecnico di Milano (Italy), which runs a machine learning algorithm first proposed by researchers working at Quantinuum (United Kingdom). The goal was to classify data points using a photonic quantum computer and single out the contribution of quantum effects, to understand the advantage with respect to classical computers. The experiment showed that already small-sized quantum processors can peform better than conventional algorithms. "We found that for specific tasks our algorithm commits fewer errors than its classical Counterpart," explains Philip Walther from the University of Vienna, lead of the project. "This implies that existing quantum computers can show good performances without necessarily going beyond the state-of-the-art Technology" adds Zhenghao Yin, first author of the publication inNature Photonics.

Another interesting aspect of the new research is that photonic platforms can consume less energy with respect to standard computers. "This could prove crucial in the future, given that machine learning algorithms are becoming infeasible, due to the too high energy demands," emphasizes co-author Iris Agresti.

The result of the researchers has an impact both on quantum computation, since it identifies tasks that benefit from quantum effects, as well as on standard computing. Indeed, new algorithms, inspired by quantum architectures could be designed, reaching better performances and reducing energy consumption.


Story Source:

Materials provided byUniversity of Vienna.Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Zhenghao Yin, Iris Agresti, Giovanni de Felice, Douglas Brown, Alexis Toumi, Ciro Pentangelo, Simone Piacentini, Andrea Crespi, Francesco Ceccarelli, Roberto Osellame, Bob Coecke, Philip Walther.Experimental quantum-enhanced kernel-based machine learning on a photonic processor.Nature Photonics, 2025; DOI:10.1038/s41566-025-01682-5

Cite This Page:

University of Vienna. "Photonic quantum chips are making AI smarter and greener." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 8 June 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/06/250608222002.htm>.
University of Vienna. (2025, June 8). Photonic quantum chips are making AI smarter and greener.ScienceDaily. Retrieved October 25, 2025 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/06/250608222002.htm
University of Vienna. "Photonic quantum chips are making AI smarter and greener." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/06/250608222002.htm (accessed October 25, 2025).

Explore More

from ScienceDaily

RELATED STORIES

July 28, 2025 — Quantum computing may one day outperform classical machines in solving certain complex problems, but when and how this “quantum advantage” emerges has remained unclear. Now, researchers from ...
Oct. 12, 2023 — Quantum computers promise to reach speeds and efficiencies impossible for even the fastest supercomputers of today. Yet the technology hasn't seen much scale-up and commercialization largely due ...
Jan. 26, 2023 — Quasiparticles -- long-lived particle-like excitations -- are a cornerstone of quantum physics, with famous examples such as Cooper pairs in superconductivity and, recently, Dirac quasiparticles in ...
July 20, 2022 — Computers and smartphones have different kinds of memory, which vary in speed and power efficiency depending on where they are used in the system. Typically, larger computers, especially those in ...
June 13, 2022 — The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) has created a crisis in computing and a significant need for more hardware that is both energy-efficient and scalable. A key step in ...
June 16, 2021 — Quantum computers could outperform classical computers at many tasks, but only if the errors that are an inevitable part of computational tasks are isolated rather than widespread events. Now, ...

TRENDING ATSCITECHDAILY.com

Forensics’ “Holy Grail”: New Test Recovers Fingerprints From Ammunition Casing

The 8-Year Study That Could Change How We Treat Obesity

NASA’s Webb Just Found a Hidden Moon Factory Beyond Our Solar System

New Drug Could “Un-Stiffen” Aging Hearts, Offering Hope for the Most Common Form of Heart Failure

 Print  Email  Share

Breaking

this hour

Trending Topics

this week

SPACE & TIME
Dark Matter
Mars
Moon
MATTER & ENERGY
Albert Einstein
Materials Science
Quantum Physics
COMPUTERS & MATH
Artificial Intelligence
Hacking
Neural Interfaces

Strange & Offbeat

 

SPACE & TIME
Dark Matter Might Not Be Invisible After All. It Could Leave a Hidden Glow
Einstein’s Overlooked Idea Could Explain How the Universe Really Began
MIT Finds Traces of a Lost World Deep Within Planet Earth
MATTER & ENERGY
Scientists Just Changed the Nature of Matter With a Flash of Light
Scientists Create LED Light That Kills Cancer Cells Without Harming Healthy Ones
Physicists Discover Mysterious New Type of Time Crystal
COMPUTERS & MATH
Stanford’s Tiny Eye Chip Helps the Blind See Again
Scientists Create a Magnetic Lantern That Moves Like It’s Alive
Scientists Suggest the Brain May Work Best With 7 Senses, Not Just 5


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp