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DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS
23 January, 2026
3 Min Read
Google has achieved a major breakthrough in quantum computing through its Quantum Echoes experiment, significantly improving our understanding of quantum information behaviour. Although the experiment does not involve breaking encryption, it has reignited global discussions on Q-Day, encryption security, and the urgent need for quantum-safe systems.
Key Highlights
Quantum Echoes is a fundamental physics experiment, not a cryptographic attack.
It highlights the future risk of Q-Day and the threat of “harvest now, decrypt later”.
A large technological gap still exists between present quantum computers and those capable of breaking encryption.
Global institutions are accelerating the shift toward post-quantum cryptography (PQC).
In India, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has advised early migration to quantum-safe systems.
What is Google’s Quantum Echoes Experiment?
The Quantum Echoes experiment is a fundamental physics study conducted on Google’s 65-qubit Willow quantum processor. Its objective is to observe how quantum information scrambles and then refocuses inside a complex, entangled quantum system, a process described as a quantum echo.
Scientific Technique Used
Researchers used an advanced measurement tool called the Out-of-Time-Order Correlator (OTOC). In this method, the quantum system is given a small disturbance, its evolution is then reversed, and scientists measure how much information returns as an echo. This helps quantify information scrambling, a key property of quantum systems.
Understanding the Concept of Q-Day
Q-Day refers to the future point when quantum computers become powerful enough to break public-key encryption systems. While this would not immediately expose all digital secrets, data encrypted today could be stored and decrypted later, a threat known as “harvest now, decrypt later”.
Why Current Encryption is Vulnerable
Most online communication relies on RSA-2048 encryption, which is based on the difficulty of factoring very large prime numbers. Quantum computers using Shor’s algorithm can factor these numbers exponentially faster than classical computers, making such encryption systems theoretically breakable.
Existing Technology Gap
To break RSA-2048 encryption, a quantum computer would require approximately 20 million physical qubits and about 8 hours of stable computation. Current quantum processors, such as Google’s Willow and IBM’s Condor, have only a few hundred noisy qubits. Truly fault-tolerant quantum computers with millions of logical qubits are still 5–8 years away.
Global Efforts Towards Quantum-Safe Security
The US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has standardized post-quantum cryptography (PQC) algorithms, including CRYSTALS-Kyber for encryption and CRYSTALS-Dilithium for digital signatures. Leading technology firms such as Google and Cloudflare are adopting hybrid encryption models that combine classical and quantum-resistant algorithms.
India’s Response to the Quantum Threat
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has urged financial institutions and organizations to transition to quantum-safe cryptographic systems before the end of the decade. However, most Indian digital infrastructure remains insufficiently protected against future quantum threats.
Significance of the Quantum Echoes Breakthrough
The Quantum Echoes experiment strengthens scientific understanding of quantum information dynamics, which is essential for building future fault-tolerant quantum computers. It also reinforces the urgency of upgrading cybersecurity frameworks today, even though Q-Day is not yet imminent.
Conclusion
Google’s Quantum Echoes breakthrough is a landmark achievement in quantum physics rather than an immediate cybersecurity threat. Nevertheless, it serves as a timely reminder that quantum progress is accelerating, and nations must prepare early by adopting post-quantum cryptographic systems to safeguard future digital security.
Source: THE HINDU
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