In one new publication on Google's Willow quantum computing chip, its founder Google Quantum AI, Hartmut Neven, says its new chip is so “excitingly” fast that it appears to borrow computing power from other universethe.
According to Neven, the performance of the chip suggests the existence of parallel universes, and he characteristically mentions that "We live in a multiverse".
"Willow's performance on this benchmark is amazing: It performed a calculation in less than five minutes while one of today's fastest supercomputers would need 10 billionmillions years. If you want to write it down, it's 10.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000. The impressive number exceeds the known time intervals in physics and far exceeds the age of the universe.
It lends credence to the idea that quantum computing occurs in many parallel universes, consistent with the idea that we live in a multiverse, a prediction first made by David Deutsch."
The nature of a new reality has been met with skepticism by some, but, surprisingly, there are others on the Internet who claim to understand these things and argue that Nevan's conclusions were more than plausible.
The multiverse, although the stuff of science fiction, is also an area of serious study by the founders of quantum physics.
Skeptics, however, point out that the performance claims are based on a benchmark that Google itself created a few years ago to measure quantum performance.
Of course, this in itself does not prove that parallel versions of yourself do not run in other universes.