Today,
Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS)
announced the general availability of Amazon Braket, a
fully managed AWS service that provides a development environment to
help customers explore and design quantum algorithms. Customers can use
Amazon Braket to test and troubleshoot quantum algorithms on simulated
quantum computers running on computing resources in AWS to help them
verify their implementation. When ready, customers can use Amazon Braket
to run their quantum algorithms on their choice of quantum processors
based on different technologies, including systems from D-Wave, IonQ,
and Rigetti. Both simulated and quantum hardware jobs are managed
through a unified development experience, and customers pay only for the
compute resources used. To get started with Amazon Braket visit: https://aws.amazon.com/braket
Quantum
computing has the potential to solve computational problems that are
beyond the reach of classical computers by harnessing the laws of
quantum mechanics to build more powerful tools for processing
information. It has the potential to lead to new scientific discoveries
that could transform energy storage, chemical engineering, drug
discovery, financial portfolio optimization, machine learning, and much
more. Today, making meaningful advances in quantum computing requires
organizations to develop in-house expertise and seek out access to
limited quantum hardware. Researchers who are interested in
experimenting across a range of quantum hardware and technologies need
to setup and manage the necessary infrastructure, negotiate access with
multiple vendors, and write custom code to interface with different
quantum processors. Having access to quantum hardware and managed
infrastructure would help enterprises evaluate how quantum computing may
eventually impact their businesses so they can begin to build the
necessary skills to explore new opportunities. Managed quantum
infrastructure from a range of hardware providers would also help
facilitate research and education in quantum technologies that may
accelerate new breakthroughs and the quantum computers of the future.
Amazon
Braket helps overcome these challenges by enabling developers and
researchers in academia and industry to explore and evaluate quantum
computing using the same, consistent experience AWS offers its customers
today. Amazon Braket lets customers get started quickly, using familiar
tools like Jupyter notebooks to access pre-installed developer tools
that can be used to design quantum algorithms, visualize results, and
collaborate with others. Amazon Braket offers cross-platform developer
tools that let customers design their own quantum algorithms or choose
from a growing library of pre-built algorithms, providing a consistent
experience so that customers no longer need to learn multiple
development environments. Customers can run, test, and troubleshoot
their algorithms on quantum computer simulators that use Amazon EC2
computing resources. When ready, customers can then run their algorithm
on the quantum computer of their choice without having to engage
multiple providers or committing to a single technology. Today, Amazon
Braket customers can choose superconducting quantum annealers from
D-Wave, trapped ion processors from IonQ, or superconducting quantum
processors from Rigetti. In addition to running quantum algorithms,
customers can also use Amazon Braket to run hybrid algorithms, where the
combined use of quantum and classical computing systems can help
overcome the limitations that are inherent in today's quantum
technology.
"As
we see quantum computing technologies make more meaningful progress,
thousands of customers are asking for ways to experiment with quantum
computers to explore the technology's potential and contribute to its
development," said Bill Vass, Vice President, Technology, at AWS. "The
cloud will be the main way that customers access quantum computers and
combine those systems with high-performance classical computing for
certain types of computationally-intensive research. Amazon Braket makes
it easy for organizations to begin experimenting with quantum computing
today-from those just beginning to explore the possibilities to those
that are already familiar with different quantum technologies and are
ready to use it as a research tool. Our goal for Amazon Braket is to be a
catalyst for innovation across the quantum community, bringing together
hardware and software developers, researchers, and end users."
Amazon
Braket is available today in US East (N. Virginia), US West (N.
California), and US West (Oregon) AWS Regions, with more regions planned
for the future.
The
Fidelity Center for Applied Technology (FCAT) is a catalyst for
breakthrough ideas, contributing to a successful future for Fidelity and
its customers. FCAT teams track emerging social and tech trends, test
product concepts and ideas, and build scalable solutions that support
more efficient operations and enhance customer satisfaction. "Amazon
Braket enables FCAT to develop hardware-agnostic software so we can
easily switch to new quantum systems as they become available. We're
able to research the strengths of different quantum backends, build
hybrid classical-to-quantum, and quantum-to-quantum workflows," said
Adam Schouela, Head of Emerging Technology at the Fidelity Center for
Applied Technology. "FCAT worked with Amazon's Quantum Solutions Lab to
create proofs-of-concept that push the boundaries of what is possible
today with cloud-based quantum computers for the financial sector, as
part of our broader efforts to be able to quickly deliver innovative
solutions to help meet the rapidly evolving needs of our customers."
Volkswagen
Group is one of the world's largest producers of passenger cars and
Europe's largest automaker. "At Volkswagen, we want to gain in-depth
understanding of the meaningful use of quantum computing in a corporate
environment. The key will be the testing and continuous further
development of algorithms on various quantum computers," said Florian
Neukart, Director Advanced Technologies and IT Strategy, Volkswagen
Group of America. "For the first time, Amazon Braket makes it possible
to address and use quantum computers of different service providers via a
standardized programming interface. This offers considerable
opportunities for accelerating development work and improving our
quantum algorithms. We are convinced that Amazon Braket can help deliver
the benefits of quantum computing to society and industry even faster."
Enel
is a multinational power company and a leading integrated player in the
global power, gas and renewables markets. It is present in over 30
countries worldwide, producing energy with over 88 GW of managed
capacity. "Enel distributes electricity through a network of over 2.2
million kilometers and with around 74 million business and household end
users worldwide. Because of our wide service network, the ability to
optimize our resource planning is an essential component of digital
transformation, and one that we can turn into a concrete advantage,"
said Fabio Veronese, Head of Infrastructure & Networks Digital Hub,
Enel S.p.A. "During a collaboration with DATA Reply and AWS, we have
tested innovative techniques to perform optimization using Amazon EC2
resources, as well as today's quantum computers through Amazon Braket.
These techniques are promising, and we expect they will lead to
solutions that can deliver savings to our operations, especially over
time as quantum hardware matures."
Amgen
is one of the world's leading biotechnology companies, with a presence
in approximately 100 countries. The firm focuses on the discovery,
development, and manufacturing of innovative medicines. "Quantum
computing has the potential to outperform existing computational methods
when it comes to important questions in drug discovery. In fact, the
computational demand of running accurate quantum calculations scales
quickly out of reach for classical computers as the size of the
molecular system in our research increases, and we must resort to
approximations that sacrifice accuracy for efficiency," according to Yax
Sun, Director and Narbe Mardirossian, Scientist, at Amgen. "By
collaborating with the Amazon Quantum Solutions Lab and QSimulate, we've
been able to quickly build and test a cloud-based approach using
multiple compute resources on AWS for a critical drug discovery
process--a process we plan to transition to a quantum computer in the
future when it is practical. Looking ahead, Amazon Braket has the
potential to substantially benefit the research and scientific community
by providing on-demand access to quantum computing technologies and
accelerate innovation in biotechnology."
The
Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) is a world-leading quantum
institute at the University of Waterloo. IQC is advancing the field of
quantum information at the highest international level to discover and
develop powerful new quantum technologies that will drive future
economies. "While it's hard to predict which products and sectors will
be disrupted the most by quantum computation, or when the disruptions
will happen, there is great risk in being caught off-guard and great
opportunity in managing the uncertainties wisely. The wise path involves
continually exploring where the algorithmic advantages may lie and
being ready to run on whichever quantum computer offers the resources
needed to achieve the advantage," said Michele Mosca, Full Professor at
the University of Waterloo. "A quantum computing service, like Amazon
Braket, that offers ready access to multiple hardware devices enables
quantum readiness and agility."
Rahko
is a London-based quantum machine learning company that is focused on
chemical simulation for drugs, batteries, advanced materials and
chemicals. "Quantum computing is enabling us to support customers to
advance development in areas such as drug discovery and development,
battery tech, and material science," said Miriam Cha, Chief Operating
Officer, Rahko. "Working with Amazon Braket and with the support from
the Amazon Quantum Solutions Lab, the Rahko-led consortium with Johnson
Matthey, King's College London, and the National Physical Laboratory,
was awarded an Innovate UK Grant for Quantifi, a project focused on
bringing near-term quantum computing capability to material science. The
ability to model materials at the quantum level will allow us to pave
the way for significant advance across many critical research areas."
Qu
& Co supports organizations' in-house discovery and optimization
activities by developing novel quantum-computational chemistry methods
and integrating those with customers' existing computational-chemistry
and material-science workflows. "We are focused on delivering practical
quantum-computational approaches for our clients' most challenging
computational workflows," said Benno Broer, CEO of Qu & Co. "For
this purpose, we evaluated different quantum software development
platforms. Our experience developing our novel algorithms for quantum
machine learning and computational chemistry with the new Amazon Braket
service has been very positive. Amazon Braket promises a solid
integration between classical and quantum hardware, and gives us a
hardware-agnostic development environment, classical simulators, and
access to different quantum computers. From that same AWS cloud
environment, we can apply tools such as Amazon SageMaker to innovate on
behalf of our customers."
D-Wave
Systems is a leader in the development and delivery of quantum
computing systems, software and services and is the world's first
commercial supplier of quantum computers. Its mission is to unlock the
power of quantum computing for the world. "We share the goal with AWS to
explore the practical, real-world applications that deliver customer
value," said Alan Baratz, CEO of D-Wave. "And as a systems partner of
Amazon Braket, we expect that its general availability will continue to
drive the growth of the developer community and fuel innovations of
pragmatic solutions in quantum computing."
IonQ,
a leader in universal quantum computing, takes a trapped-ion approach
to quantum computing that frame its process around nature, using
identical individual atoms that act as the building blocks for quantum
processing units. "With the general availability of Amazon Braket, our
quantum computers will be commercially available to the public for the
first time," said Peter Chapman, President and CEO of IonQ. "Our
trapped-ion technology is backed by decades of scientific progress, and
we are excited that more customers than ever can access our ion-based
computers through AWS to scale their use of this technology."
Rigetti
builds superconducting quantum computing systems and delivers access to
them over the cloud. Rigetti systems are optimized for integration with
existing computing infrastructure and tailored to support the
development of practical software and applications. "Building useful
quantum applications benefits from state-of-the-art access to quantum
hardware," said Chad Rigetti, founder and CEO of Rigetti Computing. "AWS
customers can now access our most advanced processor to date, Aspen-8,
based on our 32-qubit node technology. By delivering access to our
systems in collaboration with AWS we will be able to reach more
customers and help accelerate the growth of this emerging industry."