Zuchongzhi-3, a superconducting quantum computing prototype with 105 qubits and 182 couplers, has made significant advancements in random quantum circuit sampling. This prototype was successfully developed by a research team from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC).

This prototype operates at a speed that is 1015 times faster than the fastest supercomputer currently available and one million times faster than the latest results published by Google. This achievement marks a milestone in enhancing the performance of quantum computation, following the success of Zuchongzhi-2. The research findings have been published as the cover article in Physical Review Letters.

Quantum supremacy is the demonstration of a quantum computer capable of performing tasks that are infeasible for classical computers. In 2019, Google’s 53-qubit Sycamore processor completed a random circuit sampling task in 200 seconds, a task that would have taken approximately 10,000 years to simulate on the world’s fastest supercomputer at the time.

However, in 2023, USTC demonstrated more advanced classical algorithms, completing the same task in about 14 seconds using over 1,400 A100 GPUs. With the use of Frontier supercomputers equipped with larger memory, the task is expected to be completed in just 1.6 seconds. As a result, Google’s claim of “quantum computational supremacy” at that time was overturned.

Subsequently, using the optimal classical algorithm as the benchmark, the same team of USTC achieved the first rigorously proven quantum supremacy with the “Jiuzhang” photonic quantum computing prototype in 2020. This was followed in 2021 by the achievement of the same task in a superconducting system, achieved with the Zuchongzhi-2 processor.

In 2023, the team’s development of the 255-photon Jiuzhang-3 demonstrated quantum supremacy that surpassed classical supercomputers by 1016 times. In October 2024, Google’s 67-qubit superconducting quantum processor, Sycamore, demonstrated quantum supremacy by outperforming classical supercomputers by nine orders of magnitude.

Building upon the 66-qubit Zuchongzhi-2, the USTC research team significantly enhanced key performance metrics to develop Zuchongzhi-3, which features 105 qubits and 182 couplers. The quantum processor achieves a coherence time of 72 μs, a parallel single-qubit gate fidelity of 99.90%, a parallel two-qubit gate fidelity of 99.62%, and a parallel readout fidelity of 99.13%. The extended coherence time provides the necessary duration for performing more complex operations and computations.

To evaluate its capabilities, the team conducted an 83-qubit, 32-layer random circuit sampling task on the system. Compared to the current optimal classical algorithm, the computational speed surpasses that of the world’s most powerful supercomputer by 15 orders of magnitude. Additionally, it outperforms the latest results published by Google in October of last year by 6 orders of magnitude, establishing the strongest quantum computational advantage in the superconducting system to date.

Following the achievement of the strongest quantum computational advantage with Zuchongzhi-3, the team is actively advancing research in quantum error correctionquantum entanglement, quantum simulation, quantum chemistry, and other areas. Researchers adopted a 2D grid qubit architecture, facilitating efficient interconnections among qubits and enhancing data transfer rates.

Source Info: https://phys.org/news/2025-03-superconducting-quantum-processor-prototype-faster.html

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