ORIGIN Wukong, China's independently developed third-generation superconducting quantum computer, has achieved commercial deployment at multiple locations in China, researchers at the Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Center in Hefei, East China's Anhui Province, announced Monday. Three Origin Wukong quantum computers, each of a different version, have been deployed at a supercomputing center, a Chinese university and a government agency, the center stated. Developed independently by Origin Quantum, the Origin Wukong series achieves full-stack, domestically controllable technology — from quantum chips to the operating system. The three deployed superconducting systems will support major national scientific projects, cultivate quantum information talent in higher education and serve specialized applications. Globally, only three countries are capable of commercially deploying a superconducting quantum computer, the center said. The other two are the U.S. and Canada. Since its global launch in January 2024, Origin Wukong has completed more than 530,000 quantum-computing tasks for users from 145 countries and regions. Guo Guoping, chief scientist of Origin Quantum and director at the Anhui Quantum Computing Engineering Research Center, revealed that a client from a European country has purchased their quantum computing power. Industry experts estimate the global quantum-computing market will reach US$800 billion in the coming years. Guo compares quantum computing to a rocket, traditional computing to a car, intelligent computing to a bullet train and supercomputing to an airplane. Quantum computing could slash the time to train artificial intelligence (AI) from weeks to mere hours, Guo added. Chinese companies have been making progress in developing quantum computers. Xinhua reported in March that a separate group of scientists from Anhui Province unveiled a superconducting quantum computer prototype named Zuchongzhi 3.0 with 105 qubits, a breakthrough in quantum computing advancements.(SD-Agencies) |