Image rendering courtesy of InterluneFrom AI to quantum computing, the latest tech breakthroughs share one necessity: The infrastructure around them must be cold. Finding new ways to chill devices and keep them at low temperatures is emerging as a key engineering frontier — and a big business, Semafor’s Rachyl Jones reports. One plan, from startup Interlune, is to fly rockets to the moon, use robots to capture a rare isotope of helium from moon rocks, and use the gas to cool quantum computers, according to the company’s CEO Rob Meyerson, who says it has signed $500 million in contracts so far. “The moon is for all of us,” said the former president of the Jeff Bezos space venture Blue Origin. As Russia and big quantum competitor China make moves to develop on the moon and extract lunar resources, “it’s important that we — the West, the US, Interlune — establish a right to operate on the moon.” AI technologies are growing rapidly, and quantum computers are primed to take off in the coming years, catapulting demand for the components that make them work. Some forms of nuclear fusion, the energy source touted by tech leaders as the future of power, also rely on cooled superconducting magnets. Data-center servers that power AI heat up when processing complex workloads, and that heat can slow them down, or shut them off entirely. The potential of AI to reshape society, as industry leaders are promising, depends in part on these cooling mechanisms, as does the basic function of another red-hot emerging technology: quantum computers. |