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Texas university offers full scholarship to teenage Canadian chess star – The Globe and Mail

Paulius Pultinevicius v. Maili-Jade Ouellet, Titled Tuesday, 2019 (See diagram)

Chess is not the first sport that comes to mind when you think of U.S. universities offering scholarships to elite athletes.

But for Maili-Jade Ouellet of Saint-Lambert, Que., it was her prowess at the chess board that caught the attention of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. They offered her a full scholarship to sign up at their campus in Brownsville, Texas.

White has just played Ke3. How does Black continue?The Globe and Mail

It gives me a lot more opportunity to play chess, which is what I wanted, said the 19-year-old management student. Her tuition, accommodations, chess lessons and related travel are all covered by the scholarship.

Ouellet started playing competitively at seven and kept getting better and better. She won the Canadian womens championship at 15, and last year she became just the third Canadian to earn the Womens Grandmaster title from the international chess federation.

Douglas Stoves, associate dean at the university, says Brownsville is a hotbed of chess activity. Their chess team has won the national championship three times.

Ouellet is intent on pursuing chess as a career as long as she keeps improving. But its important to have a backup plan. In her case, it is law school.

Black played 59. Re2+ and after 60. Kd3 Rxe5 (threatening Be4+) Ouellet soon won.

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With ‘Chess,’ Country Duo Honey County Offers A Searing Testament To Girl Power – HuffPost

As 2021 winds to a close, Honey Countys Sofie Lynn and Dani Rose are continuing their music industry rise.

On Friday, the Nashville duo unveiled their latest single, Chess. The new track is set to get a major boost later this month when it appears on the Peacock series Yellowstone, which stars Kevin Costner.

Speaking to HuffPost, Lynn said she got the inspiration for Chess after witnessing a bar brawl in California shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic took hold. I just got caught in the crossfire or the cross-fist, if you will but it made for a great story and it made for a great song, she said. And so, here we are.

Rose agreed, calling Chess an ode to female empowerment. She didnt intentionally try to be in the middle of this fight, she just happened to be in the middle sitting there, she said. So we were thinking, if a fight really broke out and somebody came at us, would we cower away? Obviously, we would stand our ground.

Listen to Chess below.

Chess is Honey Countys fourth single this year. When it appears on the Dec. 26 episode of Yellowstone, it will also be the fourth time the series has featured one of their tracks.

Since teaming up as a duo in 2019, Lynn and Rose have made a distinct effort to create a larger space for womens narratives in country music.

In April, the pair unveiled Got It From My Mama, a tribute to their mothers. And last month, they released a holiday-themed cover of Do You Want to Build a Snowman? from the Disney film Frozen, which has won critical praise for emphasizing two female protagonists.

The women see their success thus far as indicative of the country genre gradually becoming more receptive to more diverse artists, and credited Yellowstone music supervisor Andrea von Foerster with offering them a unique platform.

I remember talking to Mickey Guyton just as Black Like Me came out, Rose recalled. She was like, I just had to put out there what I was feeling and I didnt care what people thought about me when I put this out. And I said, Girlfriend, roll with it because its great.

A Grammy nomination later, and things really changed for her over this past year, Rose said. So shes definitely been the role model that were all looking towards saying, She can do it, so can we.

Though they are light on specifics, Lynn and Rose said they expect to unveil new music throughout the early months of 2022. A music video for Got It From My Mama is also in the works, with a release tentatively set for May in honor of Mothers Day.

Citing the Allman Brothers and Bonnie Raitt as influences, the duo hopes Chess encourages fans to put their best foot forward no matter what challenges they face.

If anyones ever underestimated you, this songs for you, Lynn said.

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With 'Chess,' Country Duo Honey County Offers A Searing Testament To Girl Power - HuffPost

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Bitcoin (BTC USD) Price Chart Risks Lapsing Into Bearish Pattern – Bloomberg

  1. Bitcoin (BTC USD) Price Chart Risks Lapsing Into Bearish Pattern  Bloomberg
  2. Why bitcoin may face another 20% plunge in coming weeks, as 'risk is heightened,' says prominent technical analyst: 'We're watching $37,000.'  MarketWatch
  3. Why Bitcoin Declined Over the Last 24 Hours  Motley Fool
  4. Bitcoin Prices Struggle Below Key $50,000 Price Level  Forbes
  5. Bitcoin Drops Below $50K, Support Between $43K-$45K  CoinDesk
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bitcoin (BTC USD) Price Chart Risks Lapsing Into Bearish Pattern - Bloomberg

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Bitcoin could hit $100K, gold $2K in 2022 thanks to ‘deflationary forces’ Bloomberg analyst – Cointelegraph

According to Bloomberg Intelligence, $100,000 Bitcoin (BTC) and $2,000 gold could greet 2022 as global markets face deflationary forces.

In a tweet on Dec. 9, Mick McGlone, a senior commodity strategist at Bloombergs research arm, forecast that next year would be good for both gold and BTC.

As inflation makes headlines worldwide this month, Bitcoin has faced criticism over its alleged role as a hedge thanks to its 39% drawdown from all-time highs.

As Cointelegraph reported, the latest U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) data is due Dec. 10, with analysts presuming that inflation will have sharpened 6.7% year-on-year.

Next year could be very different, McGlone argues, as inflationary pressures give way to declining commodity prices and equities.

$100,000 Bitcoin, $50 Oil, $2,000 Gold? he tweeted.

A previous post highlighted crude oil prices now being roughly equivalent to where they were just before the 2008 global financial risis.

McGlone is well known for his bullish views on Bitcoin. Gold, much-maligned this year thanks to its comparatively flat performance versus Bitcoin, may also benefit from macro headwinds.

Related:Bitcoin dips below $50K as Evergrande defaults on US dollar debt

The Bitcoin versus gold debate continues to rage, with proponents trading barbs as neither camp sees the kinds of gains they assumed would characterize Q4.

On inflation, however, there was consensus to be found.

"How long before investors realize that even if the Fed follows through with its inflation-fighting plan to taper QE and raise interest rates slightly in 2022, that it'll be too little too late to derail this inflation juggernaut?" gold bug Peter Schiff queried this week.

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Bitcoin could hit $100K, gold $2K in 2022 thanks to 'deflationary forces' Bloomberg analyst - Cointelegraph

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Jack Dorseys ditched Twitter for bitcoin. Has the social media bubble burst? – The Guardian

Jack Dorsey is resigning from Twitter to spend more time with his other company, Square. In some ways, the choice between Twitter and Square is a straight choice between political clout and profit. Square, a payments platform co-founded by Dorsey in 2009, is worth almost three times Twitters current value at about $97bn (73bn). But Square will never be credited with the equivalent of the Twitter revolution, or make headlines by banning a former president.

Venture capital is pouring money into cryptocurrencies and payment platforms. Twitter, by contrast, having only started to become profitable since 2018, has always been more notable for its political impact than its commercial pull. However, Twitter, like the wider social industry of which it is a part, may be experiencing the limits of its growth. In terms of commercial reach, Twitter is no competition for industry giants such as Facebook, YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram and TikTok, which each have well over a billion users. But even Facebook and Instagram are slowing down.

Generation Z is turning off the major platforms. Downloads of Facebook and Instagram have been declining, according to a Bank of America report published in 2019. Both Twitter and Facebook have been losing ground with businesses due to this demographic shift in demand. By capitalising on the rise of video-sharing, TikTok has captured a much younger audience than Facebook or Twitter. Some businesses are also abandoning social media entirely, from fashion house Bottega Veneta, to Tesla, Lush and JD Wetherspoon.

It makes sense that investors are looking for the next big thing from tech, and that social media bosses would be searching for ways to profit from the cryptocurrency bubble. Before he left, Dorsey had been trying to expand Twitter into offering crypto-based payments and non-fungible token services. His replacement as CEO, Parag Agrawal, was tasked with developing Twitters crypto strategy, and it seems likely that Twitter will continue to plough that field.

Twitter is not the only social media firm attempting to exploit such opportunities. Facebooks parent company, Meta, has been trying to launch a cryptocurrency that could be sent worldwide via Facebook products, so far to no avail. This move makes more sense for a platform like Facebook, given that it has always offered a patchwork of services, such as video, photo, fan pages, gaming, buying and selling, and so on, compared with Twitters straightforward microblogging service.

However, this isnt just about profitability. It is about the economic power of belief. Dorsey is also a cryptocurrency fanatic. A particular champion of bitcoin, he claims it will one day unite a deeply divided country behind it, and eventually become the worlds single currency. Square accepts payments on its cash app from bitcoin, but no other cryptocurrency. Recently, Square released a white paper for a decentralised bitcoin exchange platform that would appear to freeze out competing cryptocurrencies.

Dorsey is also a doom-monger about fiat currencies those issued by governments. Hyperinflation, he oracularly warns, is going to change everything. Its happening. This is baseless. Recent inflationary pressures due to the increased costs of production and transit caused by Covid and extreme weather patterns are real. But there is no hyperinflation in the global economy. Given Dorseys profile and potential impact on investors, it could be considered a reckless thing to say; but it also reflects the strange ideology of all bitcoin enthusiasts.

According to its devotees, bitcoin is a deflationary force that routes around the inefficiencies and tyrannies of central banks and fiat currencies. It is deflationary because it is designed to mimic the supply of a real-world commodity, gold. This means that the number of coins that it is possible to mine is restricted: the supply will eventually hit a ceiling with 21m bitcoins. So even though, as the Peoples Bank of China recently noted, the digital coin is not backed up by any real value, it operates as its own virtual gold standard. Moreover, bitcoins apologists say, decentralised blockchain technology cuts out all middle men, a principle that can be deployed in gaming, finance and social networks. It makes transactions cheaper and faster and keeps efficient records without the oversight of a big state.

The advantage of this upstart libertarian ideology is that it chimes directly with the commercial interests of bitcoin investors. Currently, one bitcoin will trade for 42,973. But it wouldnt be worth a dime if enough investors hadnt decided to treat it as though it were gold. It is a hyperstition: a fiction that makes itself true because enough people believe in it. All currencies rely on what Michel de Certeau called a secret network of believers. We all must believe, not only in the value of the currency we exchange, but that others believe in it too. We look to a higher power, typically the central bank, to guarantee this belief. In the case of cryptocurrencies, the tech itself is supposed to eliminate the need for all these elaborate systems. This is typical of the California ideology, which blends the values of the libertarian right with the countercultural ethos of some of the internets pioneers.

Yet, far from driving any great disruption, the value of cryptocurrencies is mainly a byproduct of developments in fiat currencies. The latter benefited from a glut of spare investment capital caused by the institutionalisation of quantitative easing. The crypto boom since Covid has therefore been made possible by central banks sending money supply through the roof. Ironically, the cryptocurrencies have benefited from precisely the sort of central bank policies that the libertarian right tends to complain about.

Dorseys belief in a single global cryptocurrency is not likely to happen. And, as the economist Yanis Varoufakis has pointed out, it would actually be disastrous if bitcoin did replace fiat currencies. The bitcoin community would have no incentive to expand the money supply in the event of a crisis. That scenario would benefit the rich holders of the coin, such as tech monopolists, investment bankers and energy oligarchs, while wrecking the lives of everyone else.

Nonetheless, we would be fools to underestimate belief backed up by spare investment capital. Since at least 2017, when a bitcoin was trading at less than $1,000 (750), there have been a glut of articles explaining why the bitcoin bubble is unsustainable. But, far from falling apart, it continues to surge. Even after Elon Musk dropped the coin earlier this year, and China banned traders from offering bitcoin prices, its tradeable value climbed. The total value of cryptocurrencies today is close to $3tn. With Amazon looking to accept payment in bitcoins, there is space for further growth. Dorseys messianic belief in the power of crypto will probably be rewarded with profit for some time, in a way that the hype around Twitter never was.

If we underestimate the economic value of belief, we will underestimate how large the bubble can grow.

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Jack Dorseys ditched Twitter for bitcoin. Has the social media bubble burst? - The Guardian

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Can Bitcoin’s hard cap of 21 million be changed? – Cointelegraph

The hard cap on Bitcoin is secured from alteration by its incentive structure and governance mechanism. The entities that govern Bitcoin's ruleset have significant incentives to fight a change to the hard cap because of the network's architecture, but those who wish to change it have no power over the network.

The individuals with the most incentive to modify Bitcoin's hard cap are the miners. Changing Bitcoin's hard cap could boost earnings for miners for a short time. However, doing so would negate one of the main arguments for investing in Bitcoin: its scarcity.

The attractiveness of BTC for many investors is its predictable, fixed supply. However, it is not in miners' best interests to remove the fundamental driver of Bitcoin's value proposition. Although the modification will raise miner revenue in BTC terms, it would lead to a catastrophic and permanent price fall, resulting in a net loss of miner revenue in fiat terms.

Miners are more concerned with their fiat-denominated earnings than their Bitcoin-denominated revenue since practically all of their costs — salaries, equipment costs, and energy bills — are paid in fiat. As a result, if Bitcoin's price falls, miners will lose money.

The possibility of changing Bitcoin's hard cap stems from two underlying misconceptions regarding BTC as a distributed, consensus-based network. To begin with, there are dozens, if not hundreds, of different versions of the Bitcoin source code. For example, every node in the Bitcoin network runs a software that rejects any incorrect blocks.

While many nodes are running the most recent version of Bitcoin Core, some are still using older versions and implementations. As a result, while changing BTC Core's source code is simple, convincing tens of thousands of nodes to implement these modifications is significantly more challenging.

Moreover, miners have no control over the network's rules. Instead, miners are responsible for creating new blocks and validating transactions. When miners submit a new block to the network, tens of thousands of nodes independently verify it, ensuring that it generates a suitable amount of new BTC, has legitimate proof-of-work and contains valid transactions. All blocks that break these criteria will be rejected by nodes, implying that miners have no control over Bitcoin's ruleset.

When 95% of miners agreed to lift the block size limit in 2017 in an attempt to allow Bitcoin to scale, this theory was confirmed by reality. On the other hand, nodes and users resisted the shift and successfully forced miners to switch to a different scaling method.

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Countries Are Leaving The USD Standard, They Need A Bitcoin Strategy – Bitcoin Magazine

The below is a direct excerpt of Marty's Bent Issue #1126: "Dedollarization accelerates." Sign up for the newsletter here.

Above is an excerpt from an article published in Al Mayadeen yesterday morning that highlights another domino falling in a trend we've been following for years in this rag; countries deciding to conduct foreign trade in their native currencies instead of using the dollar. In the past, most of the focus has been on energy trade between countries. The petrodollar system makes it so individual countries have to settle their oil trades in USD terms as it is has become the dominant unit of account for international trade. As time goes on and other countries become increasingly displeased with the US government's attempts to police the world and worried about the pace at which dollars are being created, they have begun to begin working to conduct trade without involving the US Dollar in an attempt to separate them selves politically and from currency risk.

Russia and India deciding to conduct arms trade using rubles and rupees as their settlement currencies is yet another step away from dollar hegemony on the international stage. This may not be a big deal in terms of the size of economic activity that is being settled outside of the USD reserve system. However, it is a very strong signal to the rest of the world that the dollar isn't as sticky as it has been for the last five decades. Many countries are tired of catering to a bloated and irresponsible US federal government that seems to be banking on prestige of another era that has not necessarily been earned over the last couple of decades to claim dollar dominance over the rest of the global market. We shouldn't be surprised that countries are beginning to turn away from the dollar.

With that being said, Russia and India better have a bitcoin accumulation strategy and an intent to adopt a Bitcoin Standard over time because even if they settle their trades outside the confines of the dollar system their currencies are still competing with bitcoin, the best money humans have ever come into contact with.

The seas of the currency markets are getting frothy. Power players are taking positions and more people will begin to notice this sooner or later. Make sure you get on the ship that has the highest probability of navigating increasingly volatile seas.

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Ethereum it outperforming bitcoin because its a tech bet: Novogratz – Markets Insider

Mike Novogratz is one of the most high-profile bitcoin and crypto investors.

John Lamparski/Getty Images

Ethereum is outperforming bitcoin as the latter becomes less attractive as an inflation hedge in the face of the Federal Reserve's hawkishness going into 2022, said Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz in an interview on Wednesday.

With a fixed supply of 21 million, many investors have long seen the world's biggest cryptocurrency as a hedge against inflation, especially in the face of unprecedented easy money policies intended to keep the economy afloat during the COVID-19 pandemic. That could be challenged, however, as the US central bank turns hawkish to combat inflation next year.

Speaking on CNBC, Novogratz said that as bitcoin loses some of its appeal as a hedge against a devalued currency, ethereum is outperforming as its proponents see the potential in the solutions enabled by the underlying technology.

"People see ethereum as a technology bet," Novogratz said. While bitcoin remains the most dominant cryptocurrency, its market share has dipped to about 40%, down from 70% as investors turn to other digital assets.

For Novogratz, ethereum becomes more promising compared to bitcoin as the Fed stops pumping cash into the economy. The billionaire crypto bull said that in any event, he expects a "monster fourth quarter" on the back of a booming economy.

He also laid out his prediction of a continued bull run in stocks, which he added are trading much more bullishly than crypto.

"Crypto's not trading as bullish as equities because you see this tension, that the Fed's going to take the booze away from the punchbowl much sooner than we thought," Novogratz said in a Wednesday CNBC "Squawk Box" interview. "Broadly that shouldn't be good for risk assets."

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Ethereum Might Dethrone Bitcoin as Best Crypto Store of Value, Study Argues Bitcoin News – Bitcoin News

A recent paper authored by members of several universities, including Sydney and Macquarie, argues that recent changes in Ethereum monetary policy are making it a better store of value than bitcoin. The deflationary effect that the EIP-1559 proposal has caused in the issuance of the currency is said to be the main cause of this.

A new paper released by members of Australian universities last month is putting the spotlight on Ethereum and its possible future as a store of value. The paper, titled Better than Bitcoin? Can cryptocurrencies beat inflation?, is authored by Ester Flez-Vias of the University of Technology in Sydney and other academics, and compares the issuance of Bitcoin with the new issuance model of Ethereum, that is making the currency deflationary.

The paper states:

We show that following the recent change in its transactions protocol, the digital currency Ethereum displays a significantly lower net issuance rate of tokens than Bitcoin, achieved by destroying the feesassociated with each transaction.

This has to do with the activation of EIP-1559, a proposal that burns Ethereum in a proportional way to the usage of the network. While this proposal had some opposition when it was presented mainly from miners and mining pools it is now contributing to this new appreciation of Ethereum as a possibly deflationary currency in the future.

The implementation of EIP-1559 has caused the network to burn a significant amount of Ethereum in fees. This change has led to more than one million ETH being put out of circulation after just three months of its implementation on mainnet. Regarding this, the study remarks:

In many cases the amount of Ethereum burned outpaces the networks creation of new tokens, resulting in Ethereum potentially becoming the worlds first deflationary currency. We argue that this provides better inflationary hedging properties than Bitcoin, and Ether may therefore offer a superior long-term value storage than Bitcoin.

Other cryptocurrency projects are adopting similar burning schemes hoping to recreate the same effect. Binance coin recently activated an update to its network that also implemented fee burning. However, Binance coin and Ethereum are fundamentally different: The latter has no cap on its issuance, while Binance coin does have a hard issuance cap.

What do you think about the Better than Bitcoin? Can cryptocurrencies beat inflation? paper and its conclusions? Tell us in the comments section below.

Image Credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not a direct offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation or endorsement of any products, services, or companies. Bitcoin.com does not provide investment, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Neither the company nor the author is responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in this article.

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Pushing the Limits of Quantum Sensing with Variational Quantum Circuits – Physics

December 6, 2021• Physics 14, 172

Variational quantum algorithms could help researchers improve the performance of optical atomic clocks and of other quantum-metrology schemes.

D. Vasilyev/University of Innsbruck

D. Vasilyev/University of Innsbruck

Since it was first introduced in 1949, Ramsey interferometry has had an exciting history. The method was at the center of a series of beautiful experiments performed by Serge Haroches group that were recognized by the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physics [1, 2]. The prize was given for methods that enable the measurement and manipulation of individual quantum systems. Haroches group used individual atoms to sense the properties of photons inside an optical cavity. Building on these ideas, researchers have reported a new theoretical study that points at a promising way to push the limits of quantum sensing. Raphael Kaubruegger at the University of Innsbruck, Austria, and his colleagues employ so-called variational quantum circuits to optimize the sensitivity of an atomic sensor based on entangled atoms [4]. The result is a sensor that, with surprisingly modest quantum resources, should outperform those based on standard Ramsey interferometry.

We often think of photons as probes to study atoms, but Ramsey interferometry flips the script and uses atoms to study photons. This type of interferometry first puts an atom in a superposition of electronic energy levels and then passes the atom through an optical cavity. As a result, the quantum superposition accumulates a measurable phase shift that depends on the properties of the photons in the cavity. The experiments by Haroches group involved passing atoms through an optical cavity one at a time in order to nondestructively detect the number of photons. More photons in the cavity lead to a larger phase shift in the atomic wave function. In such experiments, each atom can be regarded as an individual entity. In other words, each atom is prepared in an uncorrelated product statea state that can be described independently of every other atoms state.

Kaubruegger and colleagues propose to go a step further by entangling 64 atoms and using them to make an even better sensor for Ramsey interferometry. They demonstrate the effectiveness of their approach by considering an optical atomic clock, in which Ramsey-interferometry measurements of the atomic ensembles phase are used to correct the clocks laser frequency (Fig. 1). Like Haroches group, the researchers manipulate a single quantum system, but one made of 64 atoms. Rather than using atoms in the product state, they propose to prepare these atoms in an entangled state, in which each atoms state cannot be fully described independently of the other atoms. They show that performing Ramsey interferometry using entangled states gives a big boost to the sensitivity of the phase sensor, beating the standard quantum limit that applies when sensing using uncorrelated atoms.

Their proposal harnesses a key innovation to prepare the entangled state. Entangled atomic sensors have been employed before, and a standard approach involves using so-called Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states. Kaubruegger and colleagues note that these states are only optimal for sensing under certain assumptions regarding prior knowledge of the phase-shift value. This limitation opened the door for the researchers to improve upon and outperform GHZ states by taking advantage of one of todays hottest concepts in quantum computing: variational quantum circuits. These circuits, which have a set of free parameters, replace the fixed quantum circuits used to implement quantum algorithms such as Shors algorithm for factoring or the Harrow-Hassidim-Lloyd algorithm for solving linear systems. Variational quantum circuits have internal parameters (such as rotation angles about certain Bloch sphere axes) that one optimizes over to perform a given task. Kaubruegger and colleagues propose to use two sets of variational quantum circuits to prepare the entangled state for sensing and to measure the parameter that they want to sense (that is, the optical phase). They call these circuits the entangling and decoding circuits, respectively (Fig. 2).

Achieving good performance with variational quantum circuits is challenging, since the parameters can be hard to optimize and one does not know ahead of time how deep of a circuit one needs, that is, how many quantum gates are required. Kaubruegger and colleagues find that excellent performance can be achieved with shallow circuits composed using the quantum resources inherently available in Ramsey interferometry and atomic-clock platforms. With only a few layers of their quantum circuits, they not only beat the standard quantum limit (which applies to measurements made using uncorrelated atoms) but also get very close to the Heisenberg limitthe ultimate limit for the sensitivity that one can achieve with a quantum system and, therefore, the ultimate limit of a quantum sensor. Here, a layer refers to the building block of the variational quantum circuit: more layers are needed to do a more comprehensive search over the Hilbert space, whereas fewer layers can only search over a smaller subspace. The fact that good performance requires only a few layers suggests that states that are beneficial to quantum metrology are relatively easy to find. This is an exciting possibility that should stimulate more investigation.

This new work is important because it brings together two different communities: the quantum sensing community and the variational quantum algorithm community. While variational quantum algorithms are getting major attention for quantum computing applications, it is rare for them to appear in an atomic experimental setting or in a sensing setting. The beautiful observation that variational algorithms could work in a realistic sensing application should inspire many experimentalists to think about optimizing their setups with variational quantum circuits, regardless of whether they involve atoms, light, spins, or superconductors. We need cross fertilization between quantum experimentalists and quantum computer scientists, and this work gives an inspiring guide for how such cross fertilization can be brought about.

Patrick Coles is a staff scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), New Mexico. He leads the near-term quantum computing research efforts at LANL, focusing on variational quantum algorithms and quantum machine learning. He also co-organizes LANL's quantum computing summer school. He has switched fields many times: He received his master's degree in biochemistry from the University of Cambridge, UK, as a Churchill Scholar and then did his Ph.D. in chemical engineering at the University of California, Berkeley. In contrast, his three postdocs (at Carnegie Mellon University, Pennsylvania; the National University of Singapore; and the University of Waterloo, Canada) were focused on all things quantum, including quantum foundations, quantum optics, quantum information theory, quantum cryptography, and (his current field) quantum computing.

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