Facts 17/11/2025 22:29

A New Era of Computing: China’s Quantum Machine Surpasses the World’s Fastest Supercomputers

China has just redefined what “speed” means in the world of computing. A quantum machine developed by Chinese scientists has completed in mere minutes a calculation that would take the world’s most powerful classical supercomputers 2.6 billion years — an achievement that challenges every expectation of what’s computationally possible.

Quantum computers operate under entirely different rules than traditional machines. While conventional computers compute using binary bits (0s and 1s), quantum machines employ qubits, which can occupy multiple states at once thanks to superposition. This enables them to process massive amounts of data in parallel — not one step at a time.

The Chinese system demonstrated its extraordinary power by solving a highly complex task known as Gaussian boson sampling. According to the research team, their quantum device—called Jiuzhang, developed at the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC) — detected up to 76 photons in a single run, with an average of around 43 over many trials. RADII - Transcend boundaries+2IFLScience+2 The machine took approximately 200 seconds to finish the computation. Phys.org+2Live Science+2 By contrast, simulations suggest that a top-tier supercomputer like China’s Sunway TaihuLight would require roughly 2.5 billion years to compute the same problem. Live Science+2RADII - Transcend boundaries+2

This breakthrough is not simply a minor upgrade — it is a paradigm shift. The calculation Jiuzhang performed is extremely difficult for classical computers because the statistical sampling over many photons grows exponentially in complexity. In effect, Jiuzhang has demonstrated what’s called quantum supremacy, meaning it solved a problem in a feasible time frame that classical machines cannot. WIRED+2IFLScience+2

The implications of this development are staggering. With quantum processors of this caliber, one day we might simulate full molecules for drug design, model astrophysical phenomena like the birth of the universe, or crack encryption systems — all potentially in seconds. Rather than chipping away at incremental speed improvements, this marks a reimagining of what computation itself can be.

Scientists across the globe are calling this a turning point — the moment when quantum technology stepped out of the lab and into a genuinely transformative future. With China now asserting leadership in the quantum race, the era of classical computing may soon feel like a distant memory.

Notably, China’s quantum ambitions haven’t stopped there. In recent years, researchers at USTC have also unveiled Zuchongzhi‑3.0, a superconducting quantum processor with 105 qubits and 182 couplers. This machine reportedly operates 10¹⁵ times faster than the fastest classical supercomputer — a quadrillion-fold speed-up. Phys.org+1 According to the developers, this quantum chip even outpaces Google’s Willow processor benchmark. Live Science

Clearly, China’s quantum programme is not a one-time stunt. The country has made quantum information science a linchpin of its long-term strategy, with major state investments in infrastructure, research, and talent. Asia Times+1

In short, this is not just a technological upgrade — it’s a total revolution in computation. The speed of light may have met its match, as quantum machines begin to redefine the limits of what’s possible.


Sources:

  1. LiveScience — reporting on Jiuzhang’s performance vs. supercomputers. Live Science

  2. Phys.org — on the 200-second run of Jiuzhang and its quantum supremacy demonstration. Phys.org

  3. Wired — background on the Jiuzhang design and its comparison to Google’s Sycamore. WIRED

  4. LiveScience — on the more recent Zuchongzhi‑3.0 superconducting processor. Live Science

  5. Phys.org — technical details on Zuchongzhi‑3.0 and its speed advantage. Phys.org

  6. Asia Times — contextualizing China’s quantum‑technology investments and strategic race. Asia Times

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