RT Journal Article T1 The quantum transition of the two-dimensional Ising spin glass A1 Bernaschi, Massimo A1 González-Adalid Pemartín, Isidoro A1 Martín Mayor, Víctor A1 Parisi, Giorgio AB Quantum annealers are commercial devices that aim to solve very hard computational problems(1), typically those involving spin glasses(2,3). Just as in metallurgic annealing, in which a ferrous metal is slowly cooled(4), quantum annealers seek good solutions by slowly removing the transverse magnetic field at the lowest possible temperature. Removing the field diminishes the quantum fluctuations but forces the system to traverse the critical point that separates the disordered phase (at large fields) from the spin-glass phase (at small fields). A full understanding of this phase transition is still missing. A debated, crucial question regards the closing of the energy gap separating the ground state from the first excited state. All hopes of achieving an exponential speed-up, compared to classical computers, rest on the assumption that the gap will close algebraically with the number of spins(5-9). However, renormalization group calculations predict instead that there is an infinite-randomness fixed point(10). Here we solve this debate through extreme-scale numerical simulations, finding that both parties have grasped parts of the truth. Although the closing of the gap at the critical point is indeed super-algebraic, it remains algebraic if one restricts the symmetry of possible excitations. As this symmetry restriction is experimentally achievable (at least nominally), there is still hope for the quantum annealing paradigm(11-13). PB Nature Portfolio SN 0028-0836 YR 2024 FD 2024-07-10 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/125600 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/125600 LA eng NO Bernaschi, M., González-Adalid Pemartín, I., Martín-Mayor, V. et al. The quantum transition of the two-dimensional Ising spin glass. Nature 631, 749–754 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07647-y NO © The Author(s) 2024.EHPC-REG-2022R03-182FI-2022-2-0007FPU18/02665 NO European Commission NO Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España) NO Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España) NO Red Española de Supercomputación DS Docta Complutense RD 20 abr 2026