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China's Zuchongzhi 3.2 Breaks Google's Hold on Key Quantum Computing Threshold
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China's Zuchongzhi 3.2 Breaks Google's Hold on Key Quantum Computing Threshold

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Chinese researchers have achieved a critical milestone in quantum computing with their Zuchongzhi 3.2 processor, reaching the fault-tolerant threshold. They are now the second team globally, after Google, to clear this hurdle, intensifying the tech race.

The quantum computing race is no longer a one-horse show. Chinese researchers have become the first team outside the United States to cross a critical threshold for building practical quantum machines, a milestone previously achieved only by Google.

Zuchongzhi 3.2 Reaches Fault-Tolerant Milestone

A team led by Pan Jianwei at the University of Science and Technology of China announced that their superconducting quantum computer, 'Zuchongzhi 3.2', has reached the 'fault-tolerant threshold'. This is the crucial point where a quantum computer can correct its own errors, enabling it to perform reliable calculations at a large scale.

Quantum computers are notoriously fragile; their quantum bits, or qubits, are easily disturbed, leading to errors. Without effective error correction, simply adding more qubits doesn't lead to more powerful computers. Crossing this threshold is therefore a significant step toward building machines that can solve real-world problems.

The US-China Quantum Race Heats Up

Until now, Google stood alone in having publicly demonstrated it had crossed this line. The achievement from Pan's team signals that China is a formidable competitor in a field widely seen as critical for future economic and national security. The race for quantum supremacy between the two tech giants is set to intensify.

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