Latest Quantum Computing Post
The week ending November 22, 2025, delivered a powerful surge of advancements in quantum computing demanding your attention—from Hong Kong deploying the city’s first chip-based quantum network to IBM and Cisco unveiling plans for a distributed, fault-tolerant quantum infrastructure. Funding accelerated, hardware reached new milestones, and post-quantum defenses hardened. These developments aren’t hype; they’re the building blocks of the next computing era. Here’s the full summary you can’t afford to miss.
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At The Qubit Report, our mission is to promote knowledge and opinion of quantum computing from the casual reader to the scientifically astute. Because Quantum is Coming.
Recent Quantum Computing Posts
Indiana U.S.A. is to Lead Coalition for Developing Quantum Technologies
Purdue to lead Indiana coalition to develop quantum technologies Purdue University is leading efforts to establish a National Science Foundation-backed quantum research center that would bring dozens of scientists from four research partners and industry together to tackle applied research in the field. The
Quantum Computing Application: Enabling In Silico Clinical Trials, Virtual Environments
Quantum Computing And Healthcare Read More… + Quantum computing completely redefines our understanding of the digital world — the world of 0’s and 1’s and how data is continuously transmitted. It also makes lofty promises of transformation and revolution — industry to industry, sector to
China Claims Demonstration of Most Powerful Quantum Computer
A schematic of a two-dimensional superconducting qubit chip. Credit: The University of Science and Technology of China
A Chinese research team has surpassed Google, building a quantum computer that completed a calculation in just over an hour that would take classical computers more than eight years to perform.
It’s the latest milestone in a line of exciting quantum computing developments across the last two years. In that time, researchers across the world have finally reached the long-sought-after ‘quantum advantage’ – the point at which quantum computing can solve a problem that would take an impractical amount of time for classical computing.
A team from Google first achieved the milestone in 2019 using superconducting qubits (which rely on the flow of current to perform computation), followed by a team from China in 2020 that upped the ante by using photonic qubits (which are based on light and have the potential for faster operation).
Now, another Chinese team (but led by the same researcher – Jian-Wei Pan at the University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai) has outperformed Google again.
In a study published on the pre-print server ArXiv, the team demonstrated quantum advantage using superconducting qubits on a quantum processor called Zuchongzhi.
Zuchongzhi is a 2D programmable computer that can simultaneously manipulate up to 66 qubits. The new demonstration used 56 of them to tackle a computational problem designed to test the computer’s prowess – namely, sampling the output distribution of random quantum circuits. The theoretical basis for this problem is tricky to summarise, involving random matrix theory, mathematical analysis, quantum chaos, computational complexity and probability theory, but the important thing to know is that the time it takes to solve this problem scales up exponentially as more qubits are added to the system. This makes it quickly unmanageable for classical supercomputers, and therefore a suitable test bed for achieving quantum advantage.
“We estimate that the sampling task finished by Zuchongzhi in about 1.2 hours will take the most powerful supercomputer at least eight years,” the team reports in its paper.
“Our work establishes an unambiguous quantum computational advantage that is infeasible for classical computation in a reasonable amount of time. The high-precision and programmable quantum computing platform opens a new door to explore novel many-body phenomena and implement complex quantum algorithms.”
This problem was around 100 times more challenging than the one solved by Google’s Sycamore processor in 2019. While Sycamore used 54 qubits, Zuchongzhi used 56, showing that by increasing the number of qubits, a processor’s performance will improve exponentially.
These numbers fall far short of the 76 photonic qubits used in the Chinese team’s 2020 demonstration, but that processor involved a novel set-up of lasers, mirrors, prisms and photon detectors, and was not programmable like Sycamore or Zuchongzhi.
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Lauren Fuge Lauren Fuge is a science journalist at The Royal Institution of Australia.
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U. of Basel Effort: Quantum Tech. to Benefit From Ultrathin Semiconductors Connected to Superconductors
For the first time, University of Basel researchers have equipped an ultrathin semiconductor with superconducting contacts. These extremely thin materials with novel electronic and optical properties could pave the way for previously unimagined applications. Combined with superconductors, they are expected to give rise to new quantum phenomena and find use in quantum technology.
Not So Cuddly: Huawei Making Plays to Steal Your Country’s Quantum Computing Talent
Informative piece with several tables of data. Not only has the Chinese Communist Party given the world the Wuhan Virus, the CCP desperately seeks your quantum computing talents. Why not go for the source of your intellectual property vice the IP itself? Recommend reading from
U.S. Gov’t Agencies Should Consider Quantum Computing in Risk Assessments
Why quantum and data protection should go hand in hand Read More… + The era of quantum computing is fast approaching, and with it the greatest threat to cryptography at a scale never seen before. A quantum computer will be able to break RSA-2048, considered
High-Temperature Superconductors Get Lanthanhum and Yttrium Added to Their List
A team led by Skoltech professor Artem R. Oganov studied the structure and properties of ternary hydrides of lanthanum and yttrium and showed that alloying is an effective strategy for stabilizing otherwise unstable phases YH10 and LaH6, expected to be high-temperature superconductors. The research was
The Shorts | 7/2/21 | Business and Industry in Quantum Computing
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QCi CEO Shares Positive Growth Outlook
Quantum Computing Inc. (QCI) (OTCQB: QUBT), the leader in bridging the power of classical and quantum computing, today [June 30, 2021] announced that it has issued a forward looking letter to shareholders pertaining to expansion of its quantum-ready software to commercial applications. The letter reviews the company’s achievements and offers a positive outlook on growth. A summary is below.