Inside Quantum Technology

Axios Reports on the international quantum race

(Axios) The first country to produce effective, working quantum computers will have a key advantage in economics, defense and cybersecurity — and the U.S., China, and Europe are all competing. Bryan Walsh of Axios Future is reporting on “. .the major emerging trends shaping the coming decades”; IQT-News summarizes his discussion on the international quantum race.

Last month, the Commerce Department added a dozen Chinese companies to a trade blacklist in an effort to prevent emerging U.S. technologies from being used for quantum computing efforts that would boost Beijing’s military.

Between the lines: While U.S. companies generally have the lead on building better quantum computers, China has invested massively in the industry, including an $11 billion national laboratory for quantum information sciences.

Chinese researchers have made breakthroughs on quantum communications, including via satellite, and Chinese companies dominate patent applications for quantum cryptography.
But in part because Chinese researchers don’t publish as often as their Western counterparts — and because travel in and out of the country has been highly limited during COVID-19 — “we don’t have a lot of visibility into what they’re doing,” says Peter Chapman, president and CEO of quantum computer company IonQ.

What to watch: Progress on American efforts to develop post-quantum cryptography standards that would resist more powerful quantum computers, as well as research from the five new quantum institutes created by the White House last year.

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