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Topological Qubits

Topological qubits are a class of quantum bits that store quantum information in the braiding patterns of exotic quasiparticles called non-Abelian anyons, rather than in the properties of individual particles.1) By encoding information in topological relationships that are inherently resistant to local perturbations, topological qubits offer hardware-level protection against the environmental noise that plagues other qubit technologies. In February 2025, Microsoft unveiled Majorana 1, the world's first quantum processor powered by topological qubits, marking a pivotal milestone in the pursuit of fault-tolerant quantum computing.2)

Theoretical Foundation

Topological quantum computing was proposed by physicist Alexei Kitaev in 1997. The core idea is that certain 2D quantum systems host quasiparticle excitations whose exchange (braiding) implements quantum gates.3) The quantum state depends only on the topological class of the braiding trajectories — not on the precise details of how particles are moved. This topological protection means small perturbations (thermal fluctuations, vibrations, stray electromagnetic fields) cannot alter the encoded information without changing the topology itself.

Non-Abelian Anyons

Non-Abelian anyons are quasiparticles that exist only in two-dimensional systems. Unlike fermions or bosons, exchanging two non-Abelian anyons transforms the quantum state in a way that depends on the order of exchanges — the operations do not commute. This non-commutativity is what enables universal quantum computation through braiding operations.

Majorana Zero Modes

A specific type of non-Abelian anyon relevant to Microsoft's approach is the Majorana zero mode (MZM), which emerges at the boundaries of topological superconductors.4) Quantum information is stored in the two ends of a superconducting nanowire, distributed non-locally across the device rather than concentrated in a single physical location.5)

Stability Advantages

  • Inherent noise protection — environmental disturbances cannot alter topological properties without a global change to the system
  • Long coherence times — the quantum state is protected by an energy gap and topological rules, reducing decoherence
  • Reduced error correction overhead — hardware-level protection reduces the number of physical qubits needed per logical qubit, potentially by orders of magnitude
  • Scalability — smaller, more reliable qubits enable denser packaging on a chip

Microsoft Majorana 1

On February 19, 2025, Microsoft introduced Majorana 1, an eight-qubit topological quantum processor built on a new Topological Core architecture.6)

Key developments announced:

  • Topoconductor — a breakthrough class of material (a semiconductor-superconductor heterostructure) that can observe and control Majorana particles to produce reliable, scalable qubits7)
  • Nature publication — accompanying research published in Nature demonstrating measurements of the new qubits, with results consistent with observation of Majorana zero modes
  • Million-qubit path — the Topological Core architecture offers a clear path to fitting one million qubits on a single chip that fits in the palm of a hand
  • DARPA US2QC program — Microsoft is building a fault-tolerant prototype as part of DARPA's Underexplored Systems for Utility-Scale Quantum Computing program, targeting practical quantum computing “in years, not decades”

The project was led by Chetan Nayak, Microsoft Technical Fellow, professor of physics at UC Santa Barbara, and director of Microsoft Station Q.8)

Other Milestones

In November 2024, researchers from Quantinuum, Harvard, and Caltech created the first experimentally demonstrated topological qubit using a Z3 toric code on Quantinuum's H2 ion-trap quantum processor with 56 fully connected qubits and gate fidelities exceeding 99.8%.9)

Implications for Quantum AI

Topological qubits could accelerate quantum AI by:

  • Reducing the massive qubit overhead currently required for error correction, making quantum advantage more accessible
  • Enabling larger, more reliable quantum circuits for variational quantum algorithms and quantum machine learning
  • Providing the stable platform needed for quantum simulation of molecular systems relevant to drug discovery and materials science
  • Making million-qubit quantum computers practical, which is the threshold for solving industrially relevant problems

See Also

References

1)
QuEra, “Topological Qubit.” quera.com
2)
Microsoft, “Microsoft's Majorana 1 chip carves new path for quantum computing,” February 2025. news.microsoft.com
3)
Wikipedia, “Topological quantum computer.” wikipedia.org
4) , 8)
Microsoft Azure Quantum Blog, “Microsoft unveils Majorana 1,” February 2025. azure.microsoft.com
5)
Microsoft Quantum, “Topological Qubits.” quantum.microsoft.com
6)
UCSB News, “Topological quantum processor marks breakthrough in computing,” February 2025. news.ucsb.edu
7)
HPCwire, “Microsoft's Big Bet on Majorana Pays Off,” February 2025. hpcwire.com
9)
The Quantum Insider, “Research Team Achieves First-Ever Topological Qubit,” November 2024. thequantuminsider.com
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