Establishing a New Benchmark in Quantum Computational Advantage with 105-qubit Zuchongzhi 3.0 ProcessorDongxin Gao, Daojin Fan, Chen Zha et al.|Physical Review Letters|2025 In the relentless pursuit of quantum computational advantage, we present a significant advancement with the development of Zuchongzhi 3.0. This superconducting quantum computer prototype, comprising 105 qubits, achieves high operational fidelities, with single-qubit gates, two-qubit gates, and readout fidelity at 99.90%, 99.62%, and 99.13%, respectively. Our experiments with an 83-qubit, 32-cycle random circuit sampling on the Zuchongzhi 3.0 highlight its superior performance, achieving 1×10^{6} samples in just a few hundred seconds. This task is estimated to be infeasible on the most powerful classical supercomputers, Frontier, which would require approximately 5.9×10^{9} yr to replicate the task. This leap in processing power places the classical simulation cost 6 orders of magnitude beyond Google's SYC-67 and SYC-70 experiments [Morvan et al., Nature 634, 328 (2024)10.1038/s41586-024-07998-6], firmly establishing a new benchmark in quantum computational advantage. Our work not only advances the frontiers of quantum computing but also lays the groundwork for a new era where quantum processors play an essential role in tackling sophisticated real-world challenges.
Experimental Quantum Error Correction below the Surface Code Threshold via All-Microwave Leakage SuppressionTan He, W. W. Lin, R. N. Wang et al.|Physical Review Letters|2025 Quantum error correction (QEC) enables practical quantum computing by encoding logical qubits in many physical qubits, which can exponentially suppress the logical error rate with increasing code size provided that the physical error rate is below a critical threshold. However, the leakage of quantum information from the computational subspace presents a critical challenge to the development of scalable QEC, which creates long-lived, correlated errors that spread across space and time. Here, we demonstrate a quantum memory operating below the threshold by implementing an all-microwave leakage suppression architecture on a distance-7 surface code. We achieve a logical error suppression factor of Λ=1.40(6), definitively reversing the above-threshold scaling (Λ<1) caused by unmitigated leakage. This scheme integrates a hardware-efficient leakage reduction unit for data qubits with a fast, unconditional reset for ancilla qubits, suppressing the average leakage population after 40 cycles by a factor of 72 to 6.4(5)×10^{-4}. Our results demonstrate the viability of all-microwave control architectures for suppressing critical errors at scale, paving the way for more advanced quantum error correction implementations.
On-chip direct-current source for scalable superconducting quantum computingLei Jiang, Yu Xu, Shaowei Li et al.|Physical Review Applied|2025 In situ Qubit Frequency Tuning Circuit for Scalable Superconducting Quantum Computing: Scheme and ExperimentLei Jiang, Yu Xu, Shaowei Li et al.|arXiv (Cornell University)|2024 Frequency tunable qubit plays a significant role for scalable superconducting quantum processors. The state-of-the-art room-temperature electronics for tuning qubit frequency suffers from unscalable limit, such as heating problem, linear growth of control cables, etc. Here we propose a scalable scheme to tune the qubit frequency by using in situ superconducting circuit, which is based on radio frequency superconducting quantum interference device (rf-SQUID). We demonstrate both theoretically and experimentally that the qubit frequency could be modulated by inputting several single pulses into rf-SQUID. Compared with the traditional scheme, our scheme not only solves the heating problem, but also provides the potential to exponentially reduce the number of cables inside the dilute refrigerator and the room-temperature electronics resource for tuning qubit frequency, which is achieved by a time-division-multiplex (TDM) scheme combining rf-SQUID with switch arrays. With such TDM scheme, the number of cables could be reduced from the usual $\sim 3n$ to $\sim \log_2{(3n)} + 1$ for two-dimensional quantum processors comprising $n$ qubits and $\sim 2n$ couplers. Our work paves the way for large-scale control of superconducting quantum processor.
Establishing a New Benchmark in Quantum Computational Advantage with 105-qubit Zuchongzhi 3.0 ProcessorDongxin Gao, Daojin Fan, Chen Zha et al.|arXiv (Cornell University)|2024 In the relentless pursuit of quantum computational advantage, we present a significant advancement with the development of Zuchongzhi 3.0. This superconducting quantum computer prototype, comprising 105 qubits, achieves high operational fidelities, with single-qubit gates, two-qubit gates, and readout fidelity at 99.90%, 99.62% and 99.18%, respectively. Our experiments with an 83-qubit, 32-cycle random circuit sampling on Zuchongzhi 3.0 highlight its superior performance, achieving one million samples in just a few hundred seconds. This task is estimated to be infeasible on the most powerful classical supercomputers, Frontier, which would require approximately $6.4\times 10^9$ years to replicate the task. This leap in processing power places the classical simulation cost six orders of magnitude beyond Google's SYC-67 and SYC-70 experiments [Nature 634, 328(2024)], firmly establishing a new benchmark in quantum computational advantage. Our work not only advances the frontiers of quantum computing but also lays the groundwork for a new era where quantum processors play an essential role in tackling sophisticated real-world challenges.