Jiuzhang 4.0 Achieves Quantum Advantage in Microseconds
Jiuzhang 4.0
Chinese Researchers Set Quantum Computing Standards with Jiuzhang 4.0
With their new programmable quantum processor, Jiuzhang 4.0, Tsinghua University and Jiuzhang Quantum Technology have revolutionised quantum computation and demonstrated a quantum advantage. Performing computing work in microseconds, which would have taken classical supercomputers 10^42 years, is a huge step towards developing fault-tolerant quantum gear. Gaussian boson sampling (GBS) uses linear optics to outperform typical computers computationally. A quantum processor processes photons to produce detection events in GBS. Jiuzhang 4.0 has produced almost three thousand of these events, proving its quantum edge. Rare Speed and Scale Jiuzhang 4.0 can handle 1024 compressed states and 8176 output modes, making it more difficult than previous trials. Squeezed light from numerous optical parametric oscillators is carefully filtered to form this processor's core. After then, a complex system of interferometers and delay loops distributes each input photon over a tremendous number of temporal and spatial modes to cube scale the connection. This dense coupling and a novel spatial-temporal hybrid encoding circuit maximise computational potential. Processor performance is excellent. Jiuzhang 4.0 calculates in 25.6 microseconds, while EI Capitan, a cutting-edge supercomputer, takes over 10^42 years. This delivers a speedup of almost 10^54 compared to the most powerful traditional supercomputers. With Jiuzhang 4.0 producing up to 3050 detected photons, the team showed that photon loss, which could make classical simulations easier, does not destroy the quantum advantage. Validating the results with a 1432-core GPU cluster for simulation and verification verified the quantum advantage claim. Traditional Advancement: Jiuzhang Series This latest achievement builds on the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC)'s Jiuzhang quantum computer achievements. First iteration, Jiuzhang (2020), completed GBS in 200 seconds, showing quantum computational advantage. The Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer reportedly needs 2.5 billion years to finish this. With a sampling rate of 10^14 times faster than standard simulations, it generated up to 76 photon clicks. Jiuzhang 2.0 (2021): Improved version with 144-mode photonic circuit yields 113 photon detection events and a Hilbert space size of 10^43. It introduced a scalable quantum light source based on stimulated emission of compressed photons with near-unity purity and efficiency. Jiuzhang 3.0 (2023): A 144-mode ultralow-loss optical interferometer recorded 255 photon-click events. The quantum computer completed a task in 1.27 microseconds, while the Frontier supercomputer would require 600 years or 3.1 x 10^10 years for the most challenging sample using exact methods. Future effects and prospects Jiuzhang 4.0's quantum advantage in GBS is a major step towards adopting quantum computers for real problems. Applications include materials science, machine learning, and drug development. Complex optimisation could affect finance and energy management, but the ability to accurately replicate complex quantum phenomena could advance quantum chemistry and materials research. Researchers want to control larger clusters of entangled quantum states and improve squeezed light source efficiency while accepting present restrictions to scale up these systems and construct fault-tolerant quantum technology.
Photonic Quantum Computing is Growing A Dynamic Photonic Quantum Computing Environment The fast-growing subject of photonic quantum computing, in which several large businesses worldwide are making headway, includes Jiuzhang 4.0: Xanadu introduced Borealis, a programmable photonic quantum computer technology, in 2022. Quantum computing allowed it to execute a task in 36 microseconds that would take classical supercomputers 9,000 years utilising 216 compressed modes. PennyLane, an open-source Python framework for differentiable quantum programming, is also available from Xanadu. Quandela provides hardware, middleware, and software quantum solutions. MosaiQ technology allows controlled manipulation of pure photons on demand. Prometheus was the first compact, self-sufficient single-photon generator to produce a photonic qubit. Ascella, a general-purpose quantum computing prototype, uses single photons to give 1, 2, and 3-qubit gates strong fidelities for variational quantum eigensolvers and quantum neural networks. They also offer Perceval, an open-source photonic quantum computing system model. ORCA Computing: Develops modular, fiber-connected photonic quantum computers for long-term error-corrected systems and quantum accelerators. GHZ-state measurements are being used to study fault-tolerant designs that reduce photon loss and probabilistic processes. Using silicon spin-photon interfaces and T centres for highly-connected topologies and low-overhead quantum error correction, photonics develops a scalable, fault-tolerant, and integrated quantum computing and networking platform. Using photons, PsiQuantum implants fusion measurements as gates and conduits in silicon circuits. Their Fusion-Based Quantum Computation (FBQC) model claims robustness against 10.4% photon loss per fusion, aiming for far higher fault tolerance thresholds. QuiX Quantum: A leading integrated photonic processor company, QuiX Quantum produces flexible multimode adjustable interferometers. They constructed 12-mode and 20-mode quantum photonic processors that can perform arbitrary linear operations with high fidelity using low-loss silicon nitride waveguides. The first Chinese optical quantum computer chip company is TuringQ, founded in 2021. Zhiyuan membosonsampling machine achieves 56-fold multi-photon registrations in 750,000 modes and scales the boson sampling issue to dimensions unreachable by classical supercomputers, giving it quantum advantage. They offer FeynmanPAQS, a commercial photonic quantum computing simulation program.
Global TundraSystems Global Photonic quantum computing company with a 64-qubit quantum processor and deep learning-based quantum error correction. It created the quantum photonics microprocessor Tundra Processor. Growing application of photonics technologies in various industries will drive the global photonics market to USD 837.8 billion by 2025. This growth demonstrates quantum photonic technology's promise and investment. Photonic quantum computers developed by top institutes worldwide will revolutionise information processing and computing.









