Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Robust quantum computational advantage with programmable 3050-photon Gaussian boson sampling

Hua-Liang Liu, Hao-Ru Su, Si-Qiu Gong, Yi-Chao Gu, Hao-Yang Tang, Meng-Hao Jia, Qian Wei, Yukun Song, Dongzhou Wang, Ming-Yang Zheng, Faxi Chen, Li-bo Li, Siyu Ren, X. Zhu, Mei Wang, Yao-Qi Chen, Yanfei Liu, Longsheng Song, Pengyu Yang, Junshi Chen, Hong An, Lei Zhang, Lin-Yu Gan, Guang Yang, Jia-Min Xu, Yu-Ming He, Hui Wang, Han-Sen Zhong, Ming-Cheng Chen, Xiao Jiang, Li Li, Nai-Le Liu, Yungang Deng, Xiaoming Su, Qiang Zhang, Chao-Yang Lu, Jian-Wei Pan·August 12, 2025
Physics

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

The creation of large-scale, high-fidelity quantum computers is not only a fundamental scientific endeavour in itself, but also provides increasingly robust proofs of quantum computational advantage (QCA) in the presence of unavoidable noise and the dynamic competition with classical algorithm improvements. To overcome the biggest challenge of photon-based QCA experiments, photon loss, we report new Gaussian boson sampling (GBS) experiments with 1024 high-efficiency squeezed states injected into a hybrid spatial-temporal encoded, 8176-mode, programmable photonic quantum processor, Jiuzhang 4.0, which produces up to 3050 photon detection events. Our experimental results outperform all classical spoofing algorithms, particularly the matrix product state (MPS) method, which was recently proposed to utilise photon loss to reduce the classical simulation complexity of GBS. Using the state-of-the-art MPS algorithm on the most powerful supercomputer EI Capitan, it would take>$10^{42}$ years to construct the required tensor network for simulation, while our Jiuzhang 4.0 quantum computer takes 25.6 $\mu$s to produce a sample. This work establishes a new frontier of QCA and paves the way to fault-tolerant photonic quantum computing hardware.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.