A new paper argues Microsoft exaggerated its quantum claims a year ago
A New Paper Argues Microsoft Exaggerated Its Quantum Claims a Year Ago
A critique published in Nature Wednesday calls the basic technology behind Microsoftâs âbreakthroughâ quantum computing chip the Majorana 1 into question. Microsoft unveiled the chip in February 2025 and said it featured a brand-new technology known as a topological qubit. Topological qubits, they said, would be the âbuilding blocksâ for their future quantum computer. Microsoft announced the next generation chip Majorana 2 at Build earlier this month.
A peer-reviewed critique of Majorana 1 claims Microsoft did not conclusively demonstrate a working topological qubit. Microsoft disagrees.
But in a peer-reviewed article, Henry Legg, a physicist at the University of St Andrews, reanalyzed Microsoftâs data on their device and argued that the companyâs researchers did not conclusively demonstrate a working topological qubit in the first place.
The Technology Behind the Claims
Microsoftâs design, unique among quantum computing companies, involves a tiny wire, thinner than a human hair, made of the semiconductor indium arsenide stuck to a superconductor. Theory predicts that the electrons in this wire behave in a collective pattern known as a Majorana particle, for which the chip is named. Microsoft wants to encode information in the properties of the Majorana particle. (A topological qubit is to a Majorana particle as a transistor is to silicon.)
Proponents of the Majorana particle think it is promising qubit material because theory predicts that when formed into topological qubits, the Majorana should compute with fewer errors than competing materials, such as superconducting circuits pursued by IBM. This suggests that ultimately, fewer topological qubits are needed to scale up to a useful quantum computer. That is, if Microsoft has actually made a Majorana particle.
The Critique
âThey havenât convincingly shown that they have Majoranas,â Legg told The Verge. âYou canât make a qubit if you donât have the Majoranas.â
In Leggâs critique, he writes that what Microsoft claims as a signature of the Majorana particle could actually be from the formation of quantum dots, which are electron-containing structures, in the device. Quantum dots would not be useful for building the quantum computer. He also writes that Microsoft cherry-picked their data.
Microsoftâs Response
Microsoftâs team published a rebuttal in Nature disputing Leggâs interpretation of their data. Leggâs critique âdoes not constitute a substantial scientific challenge to our findings,â the Microsoft team wrote. Legg has not âproposed an alternative model that fits all of our data,â Chetan Nayak, a physicist leading Microsoftâs quantum team, told The Verge.
Legg first posted his critique on the online physics repository arXiv on March 11, 2025, within a month of Microsoftâs Majorana 1 announcement. It took a year for Nature to conduct a peer review and publish his article.
Meanwhile, on June 2, Microsoft announced a new chip, the Majorana 2, featuring what they claimed was the next generation of their topological qubits. The company says they can build a âscalable quantum computerâ by 2029.
âWe 100% stand behind our results,â Nayak told The Verge. âWe stand by our roadmap. We stand behind our long-standing commitment to scientific rigor and dialogue.â
Legg says the companyâs characterization of Majorana 2, which Microsoft wrote in a non-peer reviewed manuscript, suffers from similar problems he pointed out a year ago. âNothing in this [manuscript] resolves the fundamental issues that so many scientists have with this companyâs previous claims,â Legg told The Verge.
Correction, June 24th: An earlier version of this article misstated the original date of publication of Leggâs critique. It was posted on March 11, 2025, not February 26, 2025.
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