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Amaravati Quantum Valley Declaration

Brief Context

Context Recently, the Government of Andhra Pradesh has officially approved the Amaravati Quantum Valley Declaration (AQVD) to transform Amaravati into India’s first Quantum Valley and a global hub for quantum technologies. About the Amaravati Quantum Valley Declaration (AQVD) It positions Amaravati as a deep-tech capital aligned with India’s National Quantum Mission. It reflects a multi-stakeholder commitment involving the state government, global tech giants like IBM, TCS, and LT, academia, and

Source Content

Syllabus: GS3/Science & Technology

Context

  • Recently, the Government of Andhra Pradesh has officially approved the Amaravati Quantum Valley Declaration (AQVD) to transform Amaravati into India’s first Quantum Valley and a global hub for quantum technologies.

About the Amaravati Quantum Valley Declaration (AQVD)

  • It positions Amaravati as a deep-tech capital aligned with India’s National Quantum Mission.
  • It reflects a multi-stakeholder commitment involving the state government, global tech giants like IBM, TCS, and L&T, academia, and startups to build a vibrant quantum innovation ecosystem.
  • It will attract $1 billion in investments by January 1, 2029, with $500 million targeted by 2027, focusing on quantum computing, chips, sensing, and communications.
  • This fosters the creation of QChipIN, India’s largest open quantum testbed, integrating quantum computers.

Significance

  • It aims to position Amaravati as a globally competitive quantum research hub.
  • It promotes public-private partnerships for innovation.
  • The initiative encourages skilling and research in cutting-edge science.
  • It aligns with India’s broader quantum mission goals and tech-driven economic development.
Quantum Computer & Its Technology
– Quantum computers are a revolutionary class of machines that harness the principles of quantum mechanics — the physics of subatomic particles.
– It is  exponentially faster than traditional systems, and allows quantum computers to solve problems like molecular simulations, optimization, and cryptography.

Core Concepts of Quantum Computing
Qubit: The basic unit of quantum information. Unlike classical bits (0 or 1), qubits can exist in a superposition of both states simultaneously.
Superposition: A qubit can be in multiple states at once, enabling parallel computation.
Entanglement: Qubits can be linked such that the state of one instantly affects the other, even across large distances.
Quantum Gates: Operations that manipulate qubits, similar to logic gates in classical computers.
Strategic Importance
– Quantum computing is considered a dual-use technology with wide-ranging implications for national security, healthcare and research, as well as solving complex financial and logistical problems.
– India’s push for indigenous quantum capabilities is vital to avoid dependence on foreign cloud-based quantum systems, which pose data sovereignty risks.

Quantum Technologies in Practice
National Quantum Mission (NQM): It was launched with ₹6,003 crore funding to develop quantum computers with 50–1000 qubits by 2031.
QpiAI-Indus: India’s first full-stack quantum computer with 25 superconducting qubits, launched in 2025.
Quantum Communication: ISRO and SAC are developing satellite-based quantum key distribution (QKD) systems for ultra-secure data transmission.
Quantum Materials: Research into superconductors and topological materials for building stable quantum devices.
Challenges Ahead
Error correction: Qubits are fragile and prone to decoherence.
Scalability: Building systems with thousands of reliable qubits remains a major engineering challenge.
Cost & Complexity: Requires cryogenic environments and advanced shielding.

Source: TH

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