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What is Majorana 1? Top 5 things to know about Microsoft's quantum computing chip

Microsoft spent 17 years researching a new material and architecture for Majorana 1, its new quantum computing chip.

Published on: Feb 20, 2025 03:29 PM IST
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Microsoft released Majorana 1, the world's first quantum chip built on a topological core on Wednesday, February 19, with CEO Satya Nadella calling it an “entirely new state of matter, unlocked by a new class of materials, top conductors, that enable a fundamental leap in computing".

Microsoft's Majorana 1 quantum computing chip is pictured in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters on February 19, 2025. ( Microsoft/Handout via Reuters)
Microsoft's Majorana 1 quantum computing chip is pictured in this undated handout photo obtained by Reuters on February 19, 2025. ( Microsoft/Handout via Reuters)

Satya Nadella said on X, “After a nearly 20 year pursuit, we’ve created an entirely new state of matter, unlocked by a new class of materials, topoconductors, that enable a fundamental leap in computing.”

Also Read: Microsoft creates an ‘entirely new state of matter’, Satya Nadella calls it a breakthrough

5 things to know about Microsoft's ‘Majorana’:

1) Majorana Fermion particle

Majorana 1 relies on a subatomic particle called the Majorana fermion which was theorised as existing by scientist Ettore Majorana in 1937, a Bloomberg report quoted Jason Zander, a Microsoft executive vice president as saying. "It’s taken us nearly a hundred years to prove it. Now we can harness it,” he added.

2) What is Majorana 1 made of?

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3) What can Majorana 1 help humans do?

Just one single chip with a million qubits can perform accurate simulations which can help humans to improve the understanding of the natural world and unlock breakthroughs in medicine and material science, according to a report by The Verge.

4) Majorana 1's accuracy far exceeds its competitors

Majorana's chip has far fewer qubits than rival chips from Google and IBM, but Microsoft still believes that much fewer of its Majorana-based qubits will be needed to make useful computers since the error rates are lower.

Also Read: US woman who bragged about WFH job fired under DOGE cuts, Elon Musk reacts

5) Majorana 1 gets big name takers already

The US Department of Defense has shown strong interest in the new technology, according to a report by news agency AFP, which added that Microsoft has been selected as one of just two companies to advance to the final phase of its quantum computing program.

 
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