D-Wave Wins $1.57 Million NSF Grant to Power Yale's ERASE Fault-Tolerant Quantum Project

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Topic: D-Wave Wins $1.57 Million NSF Grant to Power Yale's ERASE Fault-Tolerant Quantum Project   Views(Read 35 times)

Ria3

D-Wave Quantum announced on June 30 that it has been selected to receive a $1,566,250 grant from the US National Science Foundation through the agency's National Quantum Virtual Laboratory programme, supporting its role as the primary industry partner for the Yale University-led ERASE project. ERASE stands for Erasure Qubits and Dynamic Circuits for Quantum Advantage. The grant moves ERASE into Phase 2 of the NQVL programme and is part of a broader $4 million allocation over two years, with D-Wave contributing through its New Haven, Connecticut subsidiary Quantum Circuits, LLC, which it acquired as part of its move into gate-model computing alongside its traditional annealing approach.

Erasure qubits are a specific and genuinely clever approach to quantum error correction. Most quantum errors are not detected until they have already corrupted the computation. An erasure qubit is one where errors are heralded, meaning the qubit actively signals when a loss event has occurred, allowing the error-correction system to know exactly which qubit to fix and where in the circuit the problem happened. This dramatically reduces the overhead of error correction compared to standard approaches where you have to deduce errors through syndrome measurements without knowing in advance where they occurred. The dual-rail qubit architecture D-Wave provides through Quantum Circuits is particularly well suited to this erasure approach because of how the two physical modes of a dual-rail qubit interact.

D-Wave CEO Dr Alan Baratz described the project as highlighting the national importance of accelerating progress toward scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing. The grant joins a growing list of government support for D-Wave specifically, alongside the CHIPS Act letter of intent for up to $100 million already on the books. D-Wave remains the only company in the sector running both an annealing and a gate-model platform commercially, a dual-platform positioning that gives it unusual flexibility in how it serves different customer types.