Checkout! The New Quantum
Computing Machine Built by Chinese
SHANGHAI, May 3 (Xinhua) --
Chinese scientists have built world's first quantum computing machine that goes beyond the early classical --
or conventional -- computers, paving the way to the ultimate realization of
quantum computing beating classical computers. Scientists announced their
achievement at a press conference in the Shanghai Institute for Advanced
Studies of University of Science and Technology of China on Wednesday. Many
scientists believe quantum computing could in some ways dwarf the processing
power of today's supercomputers. The manipulation of multi-particle
entanglement is the core of quantum computing technology and has been the focus
of international competition in quantum computing research. Recently, Chinese
leading quantum physicist Pan Jianwei, an academician of the Chinese Academy of
Sciences and his colleagues -- Lu Chaoyang and Zhu Xiaobo, of the University of
Science and Technology of China, and Wang Haohua, of Zhejiang University -- set
two international records in quantum control of the maximal numbers of
entangled photonic quantum bits and entangled superconducting quantum bits.
Pan said quantum computers
could, in principle, solve certain problems faster than classical computers.
Despite substantial progress in the past two decades, building quantum machines
that can actually outperform classical computers in some specific tasks -- an
important milestone termed "quantum supremacy" -- remains
challenging. In the quest for quantum supremacy, Boson sampling, an
intermediate (that is, non-universal) quantum computer model has received
considerable attention, as it requires fewer physical resources than building
universal optical quantum computers, Pan said. Last year, Pan and Lu Chaoyang
developed the world's best single photon source based on semiconductor quantum
dots. Now, they are using the high-performance single photon source and
electronically programmable photonic circuit to build a multi-photon quantum
computing prototype to run the Boson sampling task.
The test results show the
sampling rate of this prototype is at least 24,000 times faster than
international counterparts, according to Pan's team. At the same time, the
prototype quantum computing machine is 10 to 100 times faster than the first
electronic computer, ENIAC, and the first transistor computer, TRADIC, in
running the classical algorithm, Pan said. It is the first quantum computing
machine based on single photons that goes beyond the early classical computer,
and ultimately paves the way to a quantum computer that can beat classical
computers. This achievement was published online in the latest issue of Nature
Photonics this week.
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