QpiAI Indus
News –Â
- The Karnataka government has installed the QpiAI Indus, a 25-qubit superconducting quantum computing system, at the Quantum Computing Centre of Excellence (QCCE) located at IIIT-Dharwad.
Objectives and Usage
- Academic Integration: Used for curriculum development, faculty-led research in quantum algorithms, and hands-on student training.
- Commercial Access: The centre offers Quantum Computing as a Service (QCaaS), allowing enterprises to experiment with use cases in logistics, finance, and pharmaceutical discovery.
- Regional Strategy: Part of the Karnataka Quantum Roadmap, which aims to establish a $20 billion quantum economy by 2035.Â
Additional Information –Â Quantum computingÂ
- It is a new way for computers to process information using the strange rules of physics that govern tiny particles like atoms and electrons.Â
- While regular computers (like your phone or laptop) use bits to store information as either a 0 or a 1 (like a light switch being on or off), quantum computers use qubits
- Quantum computers are expected to solve massive problems that would take today’s fastest supercomputers thousands of years.Â
Applications –Â
- Medicine: They can simulate how new drugs will interact with the human body at a molecular level.
- Cybersecurity: They could potentially crack almost all current internet encryption, which is why experts are already building “quantum-proof” security.
- Climate & Energy: They can help design better batteries or find ways to remove carbon from the air by simulating complex chemical reactions



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