Scientists may have found the holy grail of quantum computing
Summary
ScienceDaily reports a potential observation of a triplet superconductor in the NbRe alloy, which could enable zero-resistance transport of both charge and spin and thus stabilize ultra-fast, energy-efficient quantum computers. The work, led by Jacob Linder at NTNU, remains to be independently verified, but NbRe shows promising properties and a relatively high superconducting temperature of about 7 Kelvin.