IBM has unveiled the Condor quantum processor, a groundbreaking 1,121-qubit system that represents the largest quantum computing chip ever built. Announced in December 2023 at the IBM Quantum Summit, this breakthrough pushes beyond the 1,000-qubit threshold that researchers considered a critical milestone for practical quantum advantage. The Condor processor demonstrates a 25% improvement in error rates compared to IBM’s previous 433-qubit Osprey system, bringing quantum computing closer to solving real-world problems in drug discovery, materials science, and cryptography.
The Condor processor’s significance lies in its scale and improved coherence times, which now exceed 200 microseconds. This extended stability allows for more complex calculations before quantum states collapse. IBM achieved this by implementing a new hexagonal qubit layout that reduces crosstalk between qubits by 40%, addressing one of quantum computing’s most persistent challenges: maintaining quantum coherence at scale.
IBM’s Condor uses superconducting transmon qubits cooled to 15 millikelvin—colder than outer space. The hexagonal architecture spaces qubits more efficiently than previous square lattice designs, allowing denser packing without sacrificing performance. Each qubit connects to its neighbors through tunable couplers, enabling the processor to execute quantum gates with 99.9% fidelity. This architecture supports quantum error correction codes that require hundreds of physical qubits to create a single logical qubit, essential for fault-tolerant quantum computing.
Live from our partner network.