FILED - 27 July 2021, Bavaria, Munich: Wearing blue gloves, a Google quantum processor "Sycamore" is held up to the camera. The chip works with superconducting circuits in which macroscopic quantum mechanical effects such as tunnelling and energy quantization occur - phenomena for whose research the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded. Prize winner John Martinis played a key role in the development of the processor. This year's Nobel Prize in Physics goes to the quantum physicists John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis, who conduct their research in the USA. This was announced by th
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FILED - 27 July 2021, Bavaria, Munich: Wearing blue gloves, a Google quantum processor "Sycamore" is held up to the camera. The chip works with superconducting circuits in which macroscopic quantum mechanical effects such as tunnelling and energy quantization occur - phenomena for whose research the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded. Prize winner John Martinis played a key role in the development of the processor. This year's Nobel Prize in Physics goes to the quantum physicists John Clarke, Michel Devoret and John Martinis, who conduct their research in the USA. This was announced by th