Chinese scientists working on world's first quantum computer

Chinese scientists are developing the world's first quantum computer, which will be much faster than current supercomputers and is expected to come into fruition in a few years, according to a top scientist.
Chinese scientists are able to control the change between single particles and the quantum state, a big step in quantum communication and computing, said Bai Chunli, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Bai released the latest achievement in a report on the country's science and technology development and applications at a forum in Langfang, Hebei province on Monday.
The achievement shows that quantum research has stepped into a "control era" from an "observation era," Bai said.
A quantum computer will be terascale. An equation set might take the Tianhe-2 supercomputer 100 years to solve, but the quantum computer will solve it in just 0.01 seconds. Tianhe-2 was the fastest computer since 2013 but was replaced by another Chinese supercomputer, Sunway TaihuLight, last year.
China launched the world's first quantum satellite in 2016, leading the world in quantum communication.
- Chinese courts report progress in supporting environmental governance
- Chinese vice-premier underlines sci-tech innovation in agriculture, healthcare
- China activates emergency response as Typhoon Danas approaches
- Naval fleet led by Shandong aircraft carrier visit wins praise in Hong Kong
- Four missing after SW China mudslide
- Guizhou achieves remarkable success in advancing high-quality development, official says