To Be Achieved In Quantum Computing With Error Correction — Milestone Needed

: Transitioning from a Distance-3 code (basic protection) to Distance-5 and beyond.

Once a single logical qubit outperforms its physical parts, researchers must prove they can scale the "distance" of the code. In QEC, "distance" refers to the number of physical qubits used to protect a single logical state; a higher distance can correct more simultaneous errors. : Transitioning from a Distance-3 code (basic protection)

The first critical milestone for any QEC system is the "breakeven point." This is the threshold where a —an abstract unit made of many physical qubits—actually performs better than the best physical qubit within it. The first critical milestone for any QEC system

In the current landscape of quantum computing, we have transitioned from a phase of purely scientific discovery into an era of rigorous engineering. While early quantum processors proved that quantum mechanics could be harnessed for calculation, their greatest weakness remains their extreme fragility. To move beyond today's Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) devices, the industry must clear specific, increasingly difficult milestones in . 1. Crossing the Breakeven Point 2. Scaling the Distance

: Significant progress has been reported by teams like Google Quantum AI , which demonstrated that increasing the number of physical qubits in a surface code can indeed suppress logical error rates. 2. Scaling the Distance