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USA is begging China to share leading Quantum Technology, Dotard to kiss XJP ass?

tun_dr_m

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http://mil.news.sina.com.cn/china/2018-01-23/doc-ifyqwiqi5666317.shtml

中国量子技术领先世界美却要求分享 看国外如何评价
2018年01月23日 08:01 新浪军事

0
Saok-fyqwiqi5659463.jpg
资料图:量子技术
  中国近年来,武器技术刷新了世界的认知。“20家族”的面世,国产航母的自研成功即将海试,还有使命必达的“东风速递”。就如拿破仑所说,“当中国这个沉睡的巨人醒来,世界将为之震动。”而现在,所有人都看到中国正在醒来。

  中国在高尖科技领域的发展,也得到了来自世界的认可。在1月10日美国的量子电子物理学大会上,潘建伟院士被授予国际激光科学和量子光学领域的大奖:兰姆奖,以表彰他在光量子信息前沿领域的开创性实验研究。量子技术是一项可改写全球规则的颠覆性技术。

OMqa-fyqwiqi5659471.jpg
资料图:潘建伟院士
  自1998年设立的兰姆奖,其每年只有三名获奖者。在随后国际顶级学术期刊《自然》杂志公布的2017年度十大科学人物,潘建伟也名列其中,更是在为其撰写的新闻中宣传“拥有他是中国之大幸”。

  在美国国会参议院武装力量委员会,就中国新型军事技术以及军民两用技术的进展所举行的听证会上。一些专家称赞中国所取得的成绩具有相当高的水平,还一些专家称,中国人在一些领域的优势已经大于美国。

  中国能在世界上取得一定的优势,正是离不开像潘建伟这样的国之大匠。像马伟明,朱坤等国之栋梁就是中国崛起的根本。但俄罗斯专家认为还有一个连美国都做不到的地方,才是中国取得优势的主要原因。

C9Z9-fyqwiqi5659480.jpg
资料图:量子技术
  对此,据俄罗斯媒体1月15日的报道称,俄罗斯军事专家认为,中国已经在量子技术领域占据领先,并对美国应对挑战的反应能力产生怀疑。

  同时其称中国取得这些成就的最高原因在于,最高领导层可以为实施这些突破性项目而高度集中所有资源,中国一直将高尖科技的发展纳入国家战略中,美国上一次这么做还是在冷战的特殊时期,而其现在并不能做到这一点。美国试图希望和中国在量子领域共同发展,多次呼吁中国分享量子技术。(作者署名:前沿哨所)
 

Froggy

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Another chink language post that I cannot understand, sounds like an interesting one.
 

Truth_Hurts

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i hope the yanks give the ah tiong commies a taste of their own medicine by the yanks stealing and copying them,,,bloody tiongs steal patents all over the world,,,not they get stolen back,what goes around comes around
 

dr.wailing

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I'm unable to read the post in Chinese but based on the heading of the thread, I wish to point out that it's fake news. The Americans are still ahead in quantum computing.
 

Shut Up you are Not MM

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The Quantum Gap with China
China has ramped up its investment in developing quantum technologies, but few understand the impacts of losing this modern-day space race.

BY THOMAS E. RICKS | NOVEMBER 28, 2017, 10:00 AM

U.S. navy aircraft on the deck of the USS Enterprise on the first day of the Battle of Midway.


By Maj. Ryan Kenny, USA
Best Defense guest columnist

China has ramped up its investment in developing quantum technologies, but few understand the impacts of losing this modern-day space race.

Seventy-five years ago, the United States and imperial Japanese navies (IJN) faced off at the Battle of Midway, an engagement that would prove decisive in determining the outcome of World War II in the Pacific. The U.S. navy (USN) had devoted tremendous intelligence resources to detecting when and where such a battle might occur. They had long known that the IJN’s primary strategic objective was to lure the USN into a decisive fight. The IJN planned a surprise attack. Why then did the USN take such a risk?

The USN knew it had two critical advantages despite being outgunned and likely years behind in naval readiness than their Japanese counterparts. First, it had broken its adversary’s codes and unlocked access to all of imperial Japan’s communications. They knew precisely when and where an attack would take place. Second, the USN had outclassed its adversary’s fighting platforms with two new and revolutionary technologies, radar and sonar. Therefore, not only did the USN know precisely when and where to place its forces to counter the IJN punch, but it also maintained better situational awareness throughout the fight. Had the United States not recognized the strategic importance these technologies would play throughout the war it may have cost it victory at Midway and many other points along the way.

How does the Battle of Midway relate to the ongoing race to develop quantum technologies? Quantum technologies are those that make use of some of the properties of quantum mechanics. Features such as quantum entanglement, quantum superposition, and quantum tunneling can be applied in new forms of computation, sensing, and cryptography. Many are convinced that whoever masters this esoteric field will gain a similar dominance both in codebreaking and advanced sensors. These advantages will tip scales both in the ongoing cyber war being carried out daily over the global internet and in future state-on-state combat.

Given these risks, China’s recent announcement of a $10 billion, four million square foot national quantum laboratory in Heifi should raise alarms. Having already demonstrated a head-start in a handful of quantum technology applications — such as its launch of the Micius satellite, the first satellite-to-ground quantum network, and China’s claimed engineering of a quantum radar capable of detecting current stealth technologies — China has proven it wants to maintain its advantage. These achievements combined with the massive investment by the Chinese government in quantum research should be a wake-up call to policy-makers and military leaders alike.

China’s increased spending and demonstrated advances in developing quantum technologies will enable advantages both commercially, and militarily, for a handful of reasons. The most concerning advantage relates to codebreaking. Today, communication networks pass digital information over public infrastructures, such as fiber optic pathways and wireless airwaves, using encryption to prevent eavesdroppers from reading the content of the message traffic. The only thing stopping eavesdroppers from decrypting this traffic is the mathematical complexity of doing so. Quantum computers will have the ability to crack these codes in far less time than today’s most advanced conventional computers. Furthermore, as quantum computers make linear gains in computational power, they will exponentially decrease the time it takes to break current means of encryption.

Conversely, just as quantum technologies can be used to decrypt traditional security measures, it also can protect information in sophisticated new quantum communication channels. One of the more pervasive concerns of relying on public infrastructure to communicate sensitive information comes from eavesdroppers. Man-in-the-middle attacks allow eavesdroppers to place sensors along public communication pathways to copy all data passing through these channels and attempt to decrypt it either in real-time or later through brute-force. Today, traditional networks have no reliable means to detect when these types of listening apparatus are emplaced. Quantum technologies, by design, detect changes at the smallest of scales. metThe extreme sensitivity of quantum technologies enables them to detect anomalies such as when an eavesdropper attempts to copy or siphon off data. China has already tested a 2,000km long quantum communication pathway from Beijing to Shanghai that employs this powerful new means of detecting man-in-the-middle eavesdroppers. They have already begun to defend their most sensitive networks.

If we return to the lessons learned from the Battle of Midway, the USN realized early on that having better sensors meant providing military leaders better situational awareness in tactical engagements. The rise of quantum technologies that enhance sensing will also dramatically change the landscape of military technologies in coming years. Quantum metrology technologies enable measurements of minute changes such as gravity upon subatomic particles and other characteristic changes that occur at atomic scales. Developments in this arena will have profound effects on a variety of sensors. China claims that it has already created a new form of quantum radar capable of defeating the electromagnetic stealth technologies employed in the $1 trillion F-35 program. This would render much of the strategic investments sunk into this platform tragically outdated and call into question the future viability of this already controversial program. The announced quantum information sciences laboratory in Heifi would also focus on the development of quantum metrology and appears set to build upon China’s early claims regarding quantum radar successes.

China has demonstrated it wishes to maintain its first mover advantage in this field. Given this, what should policy-makers, military leaders, and commercial decision-makers do? Just as previous world leaders have made calls for increased scientific spending to bolster national security interests, leaders today must recognize the changing threat landscape imposed by quantum technologies and put some skin in the game. To produce a profound increase in opportunities in this field someone must provide incentives for the next generation of researchers and developers. The free market may not be enough. Recently the U.S. House Science Committee voiced concerns that the United States was falling behind countries such as China that are ramping up research and development in this area.

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As policymakers consider what technologies will give their societies and militaries distinct advantages — it is evident quantum technologies should be near the top of their list. The value proposition is clear. Quantum technologies enable better access to, and protection of, quality information. Policy and decision makers live and die by intelligence. Just as nations trembled at the prospect of another country owning the ultimate high ground — space — so too should they worry about who dominates the development and application of quantum technologies. Today, China has the high ground in quantum technologies.

Maj. Ryan Kenny is an officer in the U.S. army signal corps and has created an online forum for military communicators to foster discussions on emerging technologies at www.militarycommunicators.org. The views expressed here are his alone and do not represent the views and opinions of the Defense Department, U.S. army or other organizations with which he has had an affiliation.
 

Shut Up you are Not MM

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http://www.newsweek.com/china-using-quantum-physics-take-over-world-695026





HOW CHINA IS USING QUANTUM PHYSICS TO TAKE OVER THE WORLD AND STOP HACKERS
BY OWEN MATTHEWS ON 10/30/17 AT 10:37 AM

China is leading the world in developing unbreakable encryption using quantum physics.
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INTERNET AND TECHNOLOGY
PRESIDENT XI JINPING
CYBERSECURITY

The Nazis knew secret communication was the key to world domination. Their prize technology was the electromechanical Enigma machine, an encryption device that allowed German tank divisions, embassies and even submarines to send scrambled radio messages to the Reich during World War II. They believed their system was unbreakable. It was—until a young British mathematician named Alan Turing realized that the signal could be unscrambled if he could create a machine to systematically try thousands of key combinations that would eventually hit upon an intelligible message.

The result was the world’s first computer. Britain’s ability to read Germany’s secret codes was a crucial factor in the Allies’ victory.

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Now, thanks to a technology called quantum encryption, the dream of perfectly secure communication is real. It could help free the world from online fraud and identity theft, hacking attacks and electronic eavesdropping. It could also enable terrorists and criminals to communicate with absolute secrecy—and governments to hide their secrets without anyone ever finding out. In a world of unbreakable encryption, all human electronic communication could become entirely private—with mind-boggling consequences, both good and bad, for cybersecurity.

On September 29, that world came significantly closer to reality. A team of cryptographers and physicists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences held a half-hour video call with their counterparts in Vienna using quantum encryption, a technology that makes it impossible to hack or overhear communications.

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The new encryption standard “is what has me most excited, and most worried, of all recent technological innovations,” says a senior U.K. intelligence official not authorized to speak on the record. “It’s a world-changer.” And at the moment, experts say, while the major technical innovations in quantum technology are still being produced in such Western institutions as IBM in Armonk, New York, the University of California (backed by Google) and the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands (backed by the European Union), it’s the Chinese who are far ahead in terms of implementation.

The Beijing-Vienna call was made over a conventional Skype-type internet connection—but what was revolutionary was a secure encryption key generated in a quantum device mounted in a Chinese satellite. And, crucially, the quantum physics that created the key means any attempt to break the code can be immediately detected. “Quantum crypto is as close to unbreakable ciphers as one can possibly get,” says Artur Ekert, a professor at the University of Oxford and inventor of the model on which the Chinese based their system.

Ekert’s encryption method is based on an extraordinary effect known as quantum entanglement. The phenomenon is so bizarre and inexplicable that even the man who discovered it, Albert Einstein, was baffled. In 1935, he described the effect as “spooky action at a distance.”

Here’s how it works: Two particles of light—known as photons—in separate locations can be made to precisely copy each other’s behavior even when separated by vast distances. Exactly how this happens is still not understood, but the phenomenon was demonstrated in lab conditions back in 1984. What’s remarkable about September’s Beijing-Vienna experiment is that scientists were able to use quantum entanglement to make a secret key composed of a string of data bits appear simultaneously in different corners of the Earth.

What’s more, the Chinese team, led by physicist Jian-Wei Pan, has built an entire real-world quantum-encrypted communications system. The Chinese have linked base stations, satellites and thousands of miles of fiber-optic cable to transmit the quantum keys across the country. “It didn’t require the discovery of a new physical principle,” says Charles Clark, an adjunct professor at the University of Maryland’s Joint Quantum Institute who pioneered quantum communication over distance. What’s impressive is the scale and distance over which the Chinese have made their system work.

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“It’s a spectacular demonstration,” Clark says.

Until now, all cryptography had basically relied on creating mathematical puzzles that were beyond an enemy’s technological capabilities to solve. Today’s standard for encryption—so-called public key technology, which is the basis of all internet authentication and supposedly secure communications applications, such as WhatsApp—is much more complex than Enigma. But it relies on the same principles. The key that both users need to encrypt and decrypt the signal is generated by a computer and distributed to both parties. But given enough computing power, someone can potentially crack the key. Quantum encryption replaces that technology race with a completely different paradigm—one that no amount of computing power can break. “Unlike mathematical systems...quantum crypto relies on the laws of physics, which cannot be broken,” says Ekert.


Tests are conducted on an experimental quantum communication satellite at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, China, in July 2016.
XINHUA/ALAMY

Quantum key distribution devices—as the generators of these unbreakable keys are called—have the potential to transform the world’s e-commerce and data protection for the better by eliminating hacking and identity theft. But it’s no coincidence that the biggest investors in quantum encryption have been the world’s armies and spooks—notably the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) and the U.S. Department of Defense. “The motivation for quantum, as in all things good and beautiful, is military and intelligence,” says Clark. Any nation that masters the technology first will have a “major short-term advantage” in the strategically crucial world of communications.

That’s exactly what Pan has done, persuading the Chinese government to invest several hundred million dollars—the exact cost of the project is unknown in the West—in putting a quantum apparatus into space, as well as installing enormous infrastructure on the ground. Pan’s equipment is mounted in a satellite called Micius—named after a Chinese philosopher in the fifth century B.C.—and is in low-Earth orbit at an altitude of 300 miles. Pan also built base stations at Ngari in northwestern Tibet, at an elevation 15,000 feet to minimize signal loss from Earth’s atmosphere, as well as in China’s westernmost province and a third at Xinglong, near Beijing. The quantum codes simultaneously generated in the base stations and the Micius satellite are linked to users in Beijing and Shanghai along a 1,200-mile-long, land-based fiber-optic cable.

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According to a senior security source with direct knowledge of China’s encryption efforts, at least 600 top Chinese ministers and military officials use quantum-encrypted links for all confidential communications. “China has strategic vision going forward decades,” says the security source, who asked not to be named because of the subject’s sensitivity. Quantum encryption “is the future. The PLA has the resources and the vision to master this technology.”

Micius’s low orbit means that users not linked to China’s fiber-optic system have to wait until the satellite comes overhead in order to receive the secure quantum key that allows them to initiate communication with the other key holder back in China.

Within five years, Pan told Science and Technology magazine in August, China will launch a new satellite orbiting at an altitude of 20,000 kilometers and covering a much larger part of the Earth’s surface. A Chinese manned space station, planned for 2022, is scheduled to carry an experimental quantum-communications payload that human operators can maintain and upgrade. The ultimate goal is a set of geostationary satellites that span the world.

So far, only China has invested the billions of dollars needed to bring quantum encryption to real-world use. “The barriers to entry are quite high—basically, it needs a state-level entity,” says Clark. Ringing Earth with quantum-enabled communications satellites “is a moon-shot, Manhattan-project scale project,” says one senior Western cybersecurity expert and government adviser, referring to the major technological effort required to get men on the moon and develop the American atom bomb. “And today, we [in the West] just don’t have politicians with the vision to commit resources on that scale to any kind of long-term scientific program…. That’s why the Chinese are leading the game.” (The official did not wish to be quoted, by name, criticizing his employers.)
 

Shut Up you are Not MM

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Jian-Wei Pan, chief scientist of the Quantum Experiments at Space Scale project with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, photographed in 2016.
JIN LIWANG/XINHUA/ALAMY

The U.S., China and Russia are engaged in a huge, hidden arms race for mastery of cyberwar weaponry, from viruses capable of hijacking phone and electrical systems to the old-fashioned spies’ game of stealing the enemy’s secrets. In the short term, the new era of quantum encryption won’t plug the world’s main vulnerability—which is not inadequate encryption but a jaw-dropping lack of basic internet security. Systems as sensitive as those of the Democratic National Committee and even the White House were protected by only the flimsiest passwords and feeble antivirus software—vulnerabilities famously exploited by Russian-backed cybercriminals in 2015-16 in a series of election-related hacks.

And, as former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s disclosure of large-scale data mining by the U.S. government showed, the current goal of most Western intelligence gathering is not data—as in the actual content of emails and phone conversations—as much as metadata, or information on who is talking to whom and when. Even in a quantum-encrypted world, that metadata will still be available. And, equally important, “end-to-end encryption still has an end,” says Emily Taylor, associate fellow of the London-based Institute of Strategic Studies and editor of the Journal of Cyber Policy. “That is where vulnerability is.” In other words, regardless of how perfect the quantum encryption system is, two humans still have to send and receive their messages on electronic devices at each end that can be overheard.

Still, quantum encryption is a profoundly disruptive technology. If the basic building blocks of global communication are made secure, “then a major systemic risk to our global information and communication infrastructure, upon which we depend for just about everything, will be off the table,” says Michele Mosca of the Institute for Quantum Computing at the University of Waterloo, Ontario. “This doesn't mean we [will be] perfectly safe online, or entering an era of unbreakable online security”—but great areas of potential cybervulnerability, such as credit card transactions, databases and every form of electronic communication, could potentially be plugged by quantum encryption.

That could also help terrorists and criminals. “Everyone wants their own secrets safe, but in the business of gathering intelligence, it’s very inconvenient if others are using unbreakable encryption,” says Taylor.

What is clear is that the Chinese team has proved not only that quantum key distribution works but that any nation serious about establishing fully secure communications needs to commit vast sums to the project. “There is no secret sauce,” says quantum pioneer Norbert Lütkenhaus, a professor at the University of Waterloo. “Western countries could easily follow.” If they have the vision to do so.

“Whoever controls information controls the world,” says Ekert. By that logic, the future belongs to Beijing.
 

Shut Up you are Not MM

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https://www.computerworld.com/artic...ns-why-china-will-rule-tech-2017-edition.html



5 reasons why China will rule tech, 2017 edition
China’s plans to lead in science and innovation

By Patrick Thibodeau
Senior Editor, Computerworld |
MAR 21, 2017 3:00 AM PT
China’s push to take over global technology leadership is relentless. It wants to lead in computing, semiconductors, research and development, and clean energy. It is accelerating science investment as the U.S. retreats.

China may be planning a moon base. Surprised? Don’t be. It will soon have a manned space station. It is investing heavily in quantum technologies and it wants to be first to build an exascale supercomputer.

In 2010, Computerworld looked at “Five reasons why China will rule tech.” Here's an update, and the case for China has grown stronger.

1. China’s big science ambitions include a moon base

In the 1950s, the U.S. considered establishing a 12-man Army base on the moon by 1965. The idea was too ambitious for the time and was dropped. Meanwhile, China has set its sights on a permanent lunar base.

Richard Fisher, a senior fellow of Asian military affairs at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, sees the possibility. “The Chinese will be using the moon for a range of military purposes, and thus it is necessary for the United States to go there.” He made the comment at a hearing last month of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

[ To comment on this story, visit Computerworld's Facebook page. ]
China intends to launch its first space station module, “Tianhe-1,” next year, with the goal of having a completely assembled space station in 2022.

A Chinese lunar base is a long way off. China has targeted 2036 for landing on the moon. But what these efforts illustrate is how China thinks big and long term. China has established a goal of becoming a global scientific power by 2050, according to a report prepared for the Economic and Security Review Commission in 2011.

President Donald Trump’s administration includes more funds for space exploration, but would do so only by cutting other science efforts at NASA. The space agency’s overall 2018 budget would be cut by about 1%.

But the moonbase is just one science effort by China out of many.

Another priority for China is quantum computing, particularly in cryptography.

“The U.S. remains at the forefront of quantum information science, but its lead has slipped considerably as other nations, China in particular, have allocated extensive funding to basic and applied research,” said John Costello, a senior analyst at Flashpoint, a cybersecurity firm, in testimony presented at a U.S.-China hearing on Thursday.

“Consequently, Chinese advances in quantum information science have the potential to surpass the United States,” Costello said.

2. China wants to win in high-performance computing

U.S. scientists -- including those at the National Security Agency -- believe China will soon lead the world in supercomputing.

“National security requires the best computing available, and loss of leadership in high performance computing (HPC) will severely compromise our national security,” wrote NSA and Energy Department scientists in a recent report.

China sees supercomputing as a race. It recently accelerated development of exascale systems and expects to produce a prototype as earlier as the end of this year, ahead of the U.S.

China has the world’s fastest supercomputer at about 125 petaflops built with its own chips. A petaflop system can perform one quadrillion arithmetic operations per second. An exascale system is 1,000 petaflops, and China is on track to produce a system well before the U.S.

Trump’s proposed 2018 budget may cut funding for U.S. supercomputer development.

3. China is attacking U.S. semiconductor dominance

For all its investment and advances, China is at least one and a half generations behind state-of-the-art semiconductors, according to a White House report released in January by President Barack Obama, just days before Trump took office. It was written with industry cooperation.

The report provides insights into criticisms that Trump leveled at China over trade practices. In its push to be first, China isn’t playing fair, the report states.

To help boost its industry, the report claimed that the Chinese government subsidizes semiconductor production, which can lower product cost and threaten direct competitors. It also “places conditions on access to its market” to drive domestic production and “technology transfer” -- requiring foreign firms -- if they want access to China’s market -- to share their technology. Theft is another means of acquiring technology, the report says.

“In 2014, the Chinese Government announced that it would spend $150 billion to expand the share of Chinese-made integrated circuits in its market from 9 percent to 70 percent by 2025,” said former U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, in a speech last November. “To put that figure into perspective, $150 billion is roughly half of all worldwide semiconductor sales last year,” she said.

The Trump administration supports a hardline on China and its semiconductors activities. But Trump may differ from Obama in one key area.

Part of the Obama administration counterattack to the China semiconductor advances was to recommend a series of “moonshots” -- projects to accelerate U.S. innovation.

One moonshot called for advances in “modeling and simulation” development -- a product of supercomputing development. But if Trump cuts supercomputing investment, it may help China advance its semiconductor agenda.

4. China plans to exceed the U.S. in R&D

China’s investment in R&D is rising so rapidly that the country is expected to surpass the U.S. in overall spending by 2020. This doesn’t necessarily mean that China is doing a better job at innovation. Other measures, such as patents registered in multiple countries, continue to point to the U.S. as the innovation leader.

Nonetheless, China’s R&D investment growth was called “remarkable” last year by the National Science Foundation. “Between 2003 and 2013, China ramped up its R&D investments at an average of 19.5 percent annually, greatly exceeding that of the U.S.” the NSF reported.

China’s innovation ambitions include leading the world on clean energy. It invested nearly $103 billion in renewables in 2015, up 17% over 2014. The “U.S. is in second place, but well behind, at $44 billion,” according to a recent report by the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. The Trump budget would cut this investment.

5. China’s leadership is focused on science

During the campaign, Trump said he supported investment in science, but his proposed 2018 budget cuts science spending.

The cuts are so deep they “threaten our nation’s ability to advance cures for disease, maintain our technological leadership, ensure a more prosperous energy future, and train the next generation of scientists and innovators to address the complex challenges we face today and in the future,” said Rush Holt, the CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Silicon Valley leaders warned before Trump took office that he would be a "disaster for innovation."

Trump may be hoping that deregulation, tax cuts and other private sector incentives will spur innovation. But the government has always played a role in basic science research and big science projects, such as exascale computers, that are too expensive for the private sector.

China’s investment in science is not a given and economic forces could derail its plans. But for now, this country sees science investment as critical to long-term prosperity.

“Innovation is the primary force guiding development,” said Xi Jinping, the president of the People’s Republic of China, in January at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. “We need to relentlessly pursue innovation,” Xi said.
 

Shut Up you are Not MM

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China already lead in many areas of technological developments and will soon be a general and overall leader over the west.

The reason being that they have almost all the TOP SUPERCOMPUTERS, which are wisely used to solve technological issues, simulation, calculation, artificial intelligence, prediction, analysis and complex statistics.

These yields lots of breakthroughs and save lots of cost and time, produced lots of impressive results and prevented failures.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOP500

Top 10 ranking
Top 10 positions of the 50th TOP500 in November 2017[15]
Rank Rmax
Rpeak
(PFLOPS)
Name Model Processor Interconnect Vendor Site
country, year
Operating system
1
93.015
125.436 Sunway TaihuLight Sunway MPP SW26010 Sunway[16] NRCPC National Supercomputing Center in Wuxi
23px-Flag_of_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China.svg.png
China, 2016[16] Linux (Raise)
2 33.863
54.902 Tianhe-2 TH-IVB-FEP Xeon E5–2692, Xeon Phi 31S1P TH Express-2 NUDT National Supercomputing Center in Guangzhou
23px-Flag_of_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China.svg.png
China, 2013 Linux (Kylin)
3 19.590
25.326 Piz Daint Cray XC50 Xeon E5-2690v3, Tesla P100 Aries Cray Swiss National Supercomputing Centre
16px-Flag_of_Switzerland.svg.png
Switzerland, 2016 Linux (CLE)
4 19.136
28.192 Gyoukou ZettaScaler-2.2 HPC system Xeon D-1571, PEZY-SC2 Infiniband EDR ExaScaler Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
23px-Flag_of_Japan.svg.png
Japan, 2017 Linux (CentOS)
5 17.590
27.113 Titan Cray XK7 Opteron 6274, Tesla K20X Gemini Cray Oak Ridge National Laboratory
23px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png
United States, 2012 Linux (CLE, SLES based)
6 17.173
20.133 Sequoia Blue Gene/Q A2 Custom IBM Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
23px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png
United States, 2013 Linux (RHEL and CNK)
7 14.137
43.902 Trinity Cray XC40 Xeon E5–2698v3, Xeon Phi Aries Cray Los Alamos National Laboratory
23px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png
United States, 2015 Linux (CLE)
8 14.015
27.881 Cori Cray XC40 Xeon Phi 7250 Aries Cray National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center
23px-Flag_of_the_United_States.svg.png
United States, 2016 Linux (CLE)
9 13.555
24.914 Oakforest-PACS Fujitsu Xeon Phi 7250 Intel Omni-Path Fujitsu Kashiwa, Joint Center for Advanced High Performance Computing
23px-Flag_of_Japan.svg.png
Japan, 2016 Linux
10 10.510
11.280 K computer Fujitsu SPARC64 VIIIfx Tofu Fujitsu Riken, Advanced Institute for Computational Science (AICS)
23px-Flag_of_Japan.svg.png
Japan, 2011 Linux
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China Leads The Quantum Race While The West Plays Catch Up


Saadia M. Pekkanen
, Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
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China's quantum satellite--nicknamed Micius after a 5th century BC Chinese scientist--blasts off from the Jiuquan satellite launch center in China's northwest Gansu province on August 16, 2016. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

Now that China has launched the world’s first quantum communication satellite, the question is will it deliver on its promise.

Named Micius after a famous ancient Chinese philosopher-scientist, everyone knows the purpose of the satellite is to help China develop long-distance quantum communication that secures corporate and government information as never before, ultrafast quantum computers, and whole quantum networks.

And no one disputes that the outcome of the space-based experiments can advance relative capabilities in cryptography as well as cybersecurity, surveillance and communications, tilting the strategic and military balance in favor of China.



Some scientists, policymakers and space engineers I queried were either unsure about or remained unconvinced of Micius’ prospects. To be sure there are technical challenges, and informational and resource bottlenecks. But I am skeptical of the skepticism.

China is already ahead of its competitors

Though it may be hard for Western and more established competitors to swallow, China has an unquestionable lead at this stage and may gain from first-mover advantages. If you look around, many people and countries have ambitions in space-based quantumdom but from what we can see in the public domain they have some ways to go.

The National University of Singapore is cooperating with the University of Strathclyde in the UK to carry out quantum experiments using cubesats. Canada is aiming to generate and send pairs of entangled photons from the ground to a microsatellite in space.

This is also true of the more advanced space powers, which certainly have research and programs on point. A leading physicist in Austria tried to persuade the European Space Agency (ESA) for a long time about satellite-based experiments to enable a truly global quantum network. With an eye on moving closer to free-space quantum cryptography, Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) did a laser communication demonstration between a low Earth orbit satellite and an optical ground station back in 2006.

In the United States, there have been feasibility analyses of surface-to-satellite quantum key generation that came out of the Los Alamos National Laboratory in 1999. DARPA, whose mandate is to create breakthrough technologies for U.S. national security, had grants in 2008 for a Quantum Entanglement Science and Technology (QuEST) program. And the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has just allocated $12 million in grants to spur innovations in quantum information science, and to help engineer a secure quantum communication system on a chip that serves national needs.

The man leading the charge

Also, China has been involved in an impressive academic track record beyond its borders. One man’s long intellectual march stands out.

Long before he won accolades and was inducted as the youngest-ever researcher into the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), China’s Jian-Wei Pan was onto something. His Ph.D. thesis in 1999 at Vienna University’s Institute for Experimental Physics was a clue to where he might be headed: “Experimental Quantum Teleportation and Multi-Photon Entanglement.”

While still a doctoral student, Pan worked with a set of coauthors to further the idea of quantum teleportation, meaning the transmission and reconstruction of the state of a quantum system across any distance. With his coauthors, Pan also claimed an experimental first in communicating quantum information in the process of quantum teleportation.

So Pan is not laboring behind some Chinese curtain as many observers might mistakenly think. From his education to his experimentation, Pan’s work builds on the traditions of academic research, and draws in leading researchers around the world. There are the competitive scientific duels that have defused some concerns about the complications that entangled photons, critical to the experiments, must face as they separate and travel vast and unfriendly distances. There are also other history-making experiments that bolster the promise of ultrasecure cryptographic devices.

Pan’s former dissertation supervisor, Anton Zeilinger, another renowned physicist in this area, is now also collaborating with him on the Micius mission.

And as a leading center for quantum-based research, China hosted the 12th International Conference on Quantum Communication, Measurement and Computing (QCMC) in Hefei in 2014.

How the West is involved

Micius’ experiments are under international scientific scrutiny. As they are a work in progress, it is also simply too early to blow up their worth or write them off.

Micius is designed to carry out experiments on quantum key distributions with ground stations and quantum teleportation across two continents. Some results are trickling in publicly, involving locations in China. At least one report says Micius already sent back 202 MB of data in “good quality” to the Remote Sensing Satellite Ground Station in Miyun outside Beijing. The data were transferred to China’s National Space Science Center, and presumably we will get more detailed explanations. Additional tests have been planned at different ground locations in northwestern and southern China (Kashgar and Sanya, respectively).

Micius’ experiments also involve a foreign Western collaborator in a very concrete way. The Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences is cooperating with China. This is where Zeilinger has a research group. IQOQI (Vienna) is contributing optical ground stations in Europe to receive Micius’ quantum signals. The purpose of this inter-continental enterprise is to generate an unconditional secure quantum cryptographic key between a ground station in Asia and one in Europe. So we can also guess we’ll hear something about the fate of Micius’ experiments from sources other than those in China.

Beijing’s full force

China’s leadership is behind the quantum enterprise in a big and credible way. Pan got lucky at an opportune time in China’s rise—not to discount the importance of his research. Step by ferocious step, Pan has indeed made the quantum frontier a real possibility for China. But a man with a scientific mission is not enough.



Behind Pan’s tenacity are China’s great power ambitions, and it would be a mistake to divorce China’s quantum saga from the country’s political and military drive. You have to look beyond the headlines and the Micius moment to where China is headed.

Chinese leadership is pretty clear on this issue, as conveyed by President Xi Jinping at the end of May: scientific and technological strength are the Chinese peoples’ platform for national prosperity and power. So, understandably, getting ahead in quantumdom is part and parcel of China’s relative positioning in the pecking order of great nations. At this stage, China is forging on with its dedicated leadership, institutional backup and an estimated $50-100 million for the quantum communication project alone. Given the high stakes for China’s military security and standing in the world, this money pot is likely to grow.

China can’t rest on its laurels, despite the head start

So this is where we are: China has delivered on its proclamations, and has a blueprint for the future. In 2011, China embarked on its quantum quest to launch a satellite by 2016; it did that. And Pan himself announced to the international conference audience in Hefei that China aims to achieve the Asia-Europe inter-continental quantum key distribution by 2020, and build a quantum communication network by 2030.

There is no question that China has openly changed expectations of what quantumdom can do for national and international security, military power balances and great power status. Even if Micius does not live up to its hype, it is a game-changer.

China has a commendable head start, but it is anyone’s guess who will come out on top in the space-based quantum competition in the long run. China cannot afford to rest on its laurels.

For now though the West, along with the rest, should get set to play catch up with China.
 

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https://warontherocks.com/2017/11/leap-quantum-technology-primer-national-security-professionals/

The Leap into Quantum Technology: A Primer for National Security Professionals
Michael J. Biercuk and Richard Fontaine
November 17, 2017


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China recently announced the launch of its Jinan Project, a quantum information effort billed as “the world’s first unhackable computer network.” Building on its launch last year of the world’s first quantum-enabled satellite, China has made significant strides in quantum technology, a field with rapidly increasing relevance to national security. Its satellite has been hailed as a major step toward “unbreakable” encrypted communications.

China is far from the only country interested in quantum technology and its potential applications to national security. Beyond secure communications, quantum computing offers new ways of modelling chemical processes, as well as superior (and artificial intelligence-empowered) targeting and autonomous decision-making systems. Quantum computers may provide the ability to crack existing secure communications, by attacking the security of public key cryptosystems. And they may even augment the performance of “standoff detection” in military settings, in which targets with magnetic or gravitational signatures are detected at a distance, and without contact with the threats themselves.

In truth, however, the full promise of quantum technology is unknown, in national security or any other field. While major claims on the subject sometimes reflect hype more than reality, it’s incontrovertible that governments and companies around the world are investing in it in a serious way. The United States has directed significant defense and intelligence dollars into quantum research. The European Union is devoting over a billion euros to its own quantum technology ecosystem. And it appears Russia may be making quiet investments as well.

The bets are good ones. Given the state of the field and its vast potential, quantum technology could be transformational, possibly even as significant an advance in the 21st century as harnessing electricity was in the 19th.

Yet the field remains very poorly understood outside of specialist circles, and popular accounts often tend toward misunderstandings and misleading claims. National security experts who are otherwise comfortable discussing nuclear weapons design, cybersecurity, energy and tech issues tend to look blankly at the idea of quantum technology or rely on hyperbolic media reports.

This may be forgivable given the technical complexity of the field and the phenomena that run counter to our daily experience. Yet this deficit puts the quality of America’s strategic planning and investment efforts at risk. And inaction following several of the U.S. government’s major strategic planning documents may open the door to other nations overtaking America’s historical strategic advantage in the field.

It’s time for this to change. Given the range of possible national security applications, and the fervor with which America’s friends and competitors are pursuing advances, the country’s strategic elite need to understand the basics. In that light, this article — a quantum primer of sorts — is co-authored by a university-based quantum scientist and a decidedly non-specialist national security analyst. While we have very different backgrounds and areas of expertise, we are united by an interest in the possibilities inherent in quantum technology and ensuring that the United States harnesses that potential with wisdom.

For the reader who has made it thus far, we’d ask: Put aside for a moment the hype, the grandiose claims, the self-interested sales pitches, and the science fiction-esque quality of the discussion as it often takes shape. The truth of quantum technologies is more interesting still.

Back to Basics

Quantum physics is, simply put, the set of laws that governs the universe on tiny scales. We mean really, really small — distances measured in nanometers, or mere billionths of a meter. Those laws appear completely different than the so-called “classical” physics of electromagnetism, gravity, and mechanics, which govern our daily experience. In our classical world, actions are deterministic. A rocket follows a predictable path, and a car slows predictably, given well-known physical laws. At the tiny, quantum level, however, things get weird. In essence, the predictable view of the world breaks down, and in its place are new rules that seem counterintuitive at best and completely at odds with reality at worst.

Most modern technology already leverages quantum physics. The trillion-dollar semiconductor industry, which has given us powerful microprocessors and mobile telephony, owes its existence to the quantum behavior of electrons in solids. In practice, semiconductors wash away most of the exotic phenomena observed at the quantum level, by aggregating many individual particles and then relying on bulk properties averaged across them. Quantum technology, by contrast, exploits those phenomena, by accessing and controlling individual atoms, electrons in circuits, and photons.

Despite countless schoolbook diagrams, atoms are not, in fact, very much like a mini cartoon solar system, with electrons orbiting their nucleus in defined pathways. Instead, tiny particles behave more like waves than spheres, and they can spread out across space and interfere with one another like ripples in a pond. This has a counterintuitive implication: We can only consider the behavior of matter at the quantum level probabilistically, rather than as fixed absolutes. At the human level, of course, we don’t observe this; the computer or phone on which you are reading this article exists in only one place, and if you fling it out of the window, its motion can be accurately predicted using the laws of mechanics.

It is this probabilistic, wave-like nature of light and matter that explains some of the stranger things we observe in quantum physics. Instead of being described as existing here or there, as with a baseball, a book or a B-2, quantum systems may be (loosely) described as simultaneously existing in more than one place until the system is observed (to say it more generally, these systems can exist in more than one “quantum state” at the same time).

This effect is known as “superposition,” and seems crazy enough on its own. But it gets stranger. Upon observation, the quantum system “chooses” just one possibility, and the superposition collapses. In other words, a particle of light or matter can be described as being in multiple places at the same time, until you have a look at it; then it freezes in just one place.

Quantum systems may also be linked together in a way that classical physics cannot describe. With “entanglement,” linked particles can be “remotely controlled” no matter how far apart they may be. Manipulate the local partner of an entangled pair and you instantaneously manipulate its entangled partner as well. In many circumstances our vernacular language — tied to our own physical experiences — is simply inadequate to describe the physics we find in the quantum realm.

These effects are so counter-intuitive that for decades many of the 20th century’s greatest scientific minds dismissed them as nothing more than mathematical oddities. Beginning in the 1980s, however, scientists began to isolate quantum systems in the laboratory and demonstrate that this unusual physics was in fact real. Now, researchers are seeking to employ those systems to power a new generation of applications — the so-called second quantum revolution. And the race is on, across the world, to make the greatest and fastest strides.

New Technologies, New Applications

You probably don’t realize it, but you very likely already employ quantum technology on a regular basis. Get in your car, switch on Waze or Google Maps, and you are already harnessing quantum effects. A GPS receiver works by measuring the tiny time delays in signals from multiple satellites separated in space. Doing this requires very stable and very accurate time measurement: enter the atomic clock. Such clocks, which reside inside every GPS satellite, often use quantum superposition. They employ atoms of Cesium or Rubidium to achieve an extremely stable “tick,” one accessible only within the atoms themselves. The primary standard for time, operated using this kind of physics, is so stable that it will lose just one second in 100 million years. That kind of stability powers not just GPS but other systems as well, including the synchronization protocols that govern Internet operations.

A clock that loses just a second in 100 million years may sound like more than we need, but scientists are hoping to harness quantum technology to do even better. New generations of research grade clocks based on single atoms are currently in development that will lose only a second in a billion years. This kind of stability enables clocks to be used as sensors — their tick is so regular that tiny changes in the environment due to gravity, magnetic fields, and the like produce identifiable signatures. The most sensitive experiments to date have shown that such clocks can measure the change in the Earth’s gravity that comes from lifting the clock by a bit more than one foot. Atomic sensors are already in use for military applications, but improvements in measurement sensitivity to these extraordinary scales promise to dramatically improve their capabilities and enable an entire new generation of remote sensors.

Today, most attention is focused not on perfecting clocks but rather on the esoteric-sounding realm of quantum information. The field consists of both quantum communications (think super-secure) and quantum computation (think blazingly fast).

Quantum communications seeks to enable new cryptographic protocols, using the rules of quantum physics to guarantee security. Photons, or particles of light which are widely used today in optical communications, possess a variety of physical properties that obey the rules of quantum mechanics. In quantum communications, researchers typically leverage the feature we discussed earlier — that measuring or “observing” a quantum state destroys its superposition or entanglement. This measurement-means-destruction phenomenon provides a new tool to detect hacking: code your quantum message in the right way and an attempt to intercept your information will destroy it — and do so in a detectable way.

Today, quantum data transfer rates remain quite low, and so communicating entire messages is not yet practical. Instead, experts have focused primarily on quantum cryptographic key distribution (sometimes called QKD) — the way in which two parties use quantum communications to share a “classical” cipher used for encoding and decoding their message. But each of these efforts does not ensure “unhackable” communications or perfectly detectable eavesdropping, only security improvements. At the moment, exploring the variety of security attacks on quantum communications systems is an active area of research.

Quantum computers in general rely on quantum bits (qubits) — their version of the bits (binary digits) that power classical computers. Bits are as straightforward as it gets. They take discrete values of 1 and 0, and they are represented physically as electronic transistors that switch on or off. Classical computers use the zeros and ones to encode information; to represent the number 18, for instance, a computer uses “00010010.”

Qubits, by contrast, can exist in superpositions of 1 and 0 — that is, they can be both 1 and 0 at the same time. The mathematical result is to vastly increase information capacity and processing power. Consider what a difference this makes: A byte (eight bits) in your computer can store a single number between 0 and 256. A quantum byte, on the other hand, can represent 256 numbers all at the same time. This exponential increase in information capacity represents a significant departure from conventional computing. As with all computing, however, one will still need to run a useful algorithm on this gigantic “information space” and get something useful at the end when measurement destroys the quantum state. Hence there is an emerging field of quantum algorithm development.

The processing speed promised by quantum computers holds out the possibility of solving problems that are exceptionally challenging for even the most powerful supercomputers. For all the wonders of today’s classical computers, there are many things they can’t do, like modelling the chemical structure or reactions of complex molecules. So don’t imagine faster Facebook and Twitter with quantum computers. Instead, imagine new computational tools that solve problems that are practically impossible on conventional hardware.

The Security Implications of Quantum Technology

Quantum technology has some obvious potential applications in the security world. Better atomic clocks, for example, would improve spatial resolution in GPS and allow for more precise targeting and navigation. Quantum communications could allow political and military leaders to exchange messages with enhanced privacy, and to know with high confidence if someone had attempted to seize their information. Quantum computing power may be used to crack encrypted messages, as we describe below.

The security and economic dimensions of just these applications are potentially enormous. Consider espionage and surveillance, for instance. Finding the prime factors of very big numbers — that is, the two numbers divisible only by one and themselves that can be multiplied together to reach a target — is extremely difficult. Make the number big enough and classical computers simply cannot factor them. It would take too long (even in the millions of years) to perform all the calculations necessary to identify its primes. Public key cryptosystems — which is to say, most encryption — rely on the mathematical complexity of factoring primes to keep messages safe from prying computers.

By virtue of their approach to encoding and processing information, however, quantum computers are conjectured to be able to factor primes faster — exponentially faster — than a classical machine. Very simple quantum demonstrations have successfully factored two-digit numbers and research is now focused on how to design and operate a sufficiently large quantum computer to factor long numbers (e.g. 2048 bits). There is a very long way to go in reaching this potential — likely several decades — but a quantum computer that does it would be able to crack even highly resistant encryption. The upshot would be to render vulnerable the entire public-key encryption system, which is today used effectively not only to pass messages but to secure transactions.

Other applications in materials science and chemistry could prove equally impactful, and on much shorter timescales. For instance, it is very difficult to build a computer model that represents all of the possible electron interactions in a molecule, as governed by the rules of quantum physics. As a result, it is challenging for today’s computers to calculate reaction rates, combustion, and other effects. Even using the best-known approximations, modelling relatively simple molecules on the world’s fastest computer could take longer than the age of the universe.

Creating nitrogen-based fertilizer, for instance, consumes nearly 6 percent of the world’s natural gas production, in part because no efficient catalyst has been found for synthesizing it. Yet biological systems perform similar tasks routinely. Today’s computers aren’t up to the task of deciphering how they do it, given the difficulty in modelling the interaction of electrons in chemical reactions. A quantum computer, however, may well be able to do so, and in the process lead to new methods of synthesizing fertilizer. The result would be a freeing up of critical energy resources and better food security.

Quantum computing could also help develop revolutionary artificial intelligence systems. Recent efforts have demonstrated a strong and unexpected link between quantum computation and artificial neural networks, potentially portending new approaches to machine learning. Such advances could lead to vastly improved pattern recognition, for example, which in turn would permit far better machine-based target identification. To imagine one example, the hidden submarine in our vast oceans may become less-hidden in a world with AI-empowered quantum computers, particularly if they are combined with vast data sets acquired through powerful quantum-enabled sensors.

Even the relatively mundane near-term development of new quantum-enhanced clocks may impact security, and beyond just making GPS devices more accurate. Quantum-enabled clocks are so sensitive that they can discern minor gravitational anomalies from a distance. They thus could be deployed by military personnel to detect underground, hardened structures, submarines, or hidden weapons systems. Given their potential for remote sensing, advanced clocks may become a key embedded technology for tomorrow’s warfighter.

For all these examples, we have seen repeatedly in the history of technology development that the most profound impacts of new technologies are generally those least anticipated. ENIAC, one of the first digital electronic computers, was designed in the 1940s primarily to calculate artillery trajectories. The idea that its technology would eventually lead to the Internet, the iPhone, and the FitBit would have boggled the minds of ENIAC’s creators. Similarly, quantum technology holds the promise to transform the world in ways not possible to imagine today.

The Global Landscape

For many years quantum technology was a field dominated by U.S.-based efforts, but the landscape is changing rapidly. The federal government was one of the field’s first strategic investors in the 1990s, funding major university-based research programs through the National Security Agency, the Department of Defense, and other intelligence community entities. (Indeed, one of us has worked on such U.S. government-funded efforts in the United States and Australia since 2001.) Washington has also built repositories of quantum expertise in the Department of Energy’s laboratories and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and it has supported work with non-traditional international technology partners like Austria and Australia.

Recently, governments in Europe, the United Kingdom, and Canada have launched new initiatives aimed at establishing domestic research workforces and a new quantum technology industry. These efforts build on longstanding strengths in fundamental physics disciplines such as quantum optics, atomic physics, and precision metrology. The scope and scale of the challenge in realizing useful quantum technologies means that these investments from traditional European allies are good for the United States. Further, U.S. co-investment in these efforts helps to ensure that domestic agencies remain integrated into top-tier research programs and major technical developments are known well in advance to U.S. agencies.

The work is not taking place only in friendly nations. Chinese research strength in quantum technology has traditionally focused on quantum communications, and China is now a global leader in the field. Following Alibaba’s investments, China has made rapid progress in output related to experimental quantum computing and recently announced multi-billion-dollar investments in the field. Russia has seen very limited public progress in the field (after having made seminal foundational contributions to quantum physics), but Russian scientists have recently emerged as co-authors on a major new experiment.

One area where the United States holds a distinct advantage is in the role of U.S.-based or -founded technology companies. The research and development community is increasingly moving away from its traditional focus on university labs, as a large and growing commercial ecosystem develops in response to research breakthroughs. IBM, for example, has recently accelerated its decades-long quantum investments and even brought online an early stage quantum computer (consisting of just 16 qubits) for free user access. Google recently invested in a research team at the University of California to seed a growing in-house quantum effort. Microsoft has inked global partnerships to link university academics with its own in-house quantum computer science theory effort. Similarly, Silicon Valley venture capitalists are entering the field, and now support a number of quantum-focused startups. The size and scale of U.S. venture capital, relative to the global supply, continues to make Silicon Valley a preferred destination for new startups — another strategic advantage for the United States.

Leaping Ahead

The United States holds major strategic advantages in the quantum race. It’s not just the supply of American venture capital, the location of Silicon Valley, or our collection of collaborative allies. The United States also has a highly competent, cleared contractor base, trusted foundries, national laboratories, and federally funded research and development centers. American investment has, however, tended to be ad hoc and disparate, and expertise has traditionally been based in highly independent academic laboratories.

Over the years there have been a variety of efforts to survey the landscape and identify opportunities in quantum technology. The Trump administration should move past paper studies and act, articulating a clear vision for quantum technology —and quantum computing in particular — and a path by which the country can realistically attain it. Recently the U.S. House of Representatives began holding hearings on U.S. leadership on quantum technology, a welcome sign of action.

Fundamental challenges remain in moving from the promise of quantum technologies to a world in which they augment national security, enhance national prosperity, and improve everyday lives. Overcoming these hurdles will require not just the right levels of funding and attracting a world-class talent base, but also working with partners abroad to leverage common efforts. Collaboration with strategic allies — especially the Five Eyes — has been essential to American leadership up to now, and it will be critical to U.S. technical superiority in the field in the future.

In light of rapidly progressing technological advances, national security experts will need to become more familiar with the basic concepts of quantum technology, and sensitive to its potential and limitations. Many professionals can describe the basic ways in which Iran has enriched uranium, talk about the various kinds of cyberattacks, or wax eloquent about the possibilities of big data-enabled AI. It’s time to add quantum technology to the intellectual toolkit of today’s national security policymakers and analysts.

We hope that this primer takes a modest step in that direction. America’s national security edge will turn in part on maintaining the gap between our own advanced technologies and those of our adversaries and competitors. In this race, quantum technology will have an uncertain but potentially transformative role to play. Now is the time to start harnessing the country’s unique advantages and working with partners to multiply them.



Michael J. Biercuk is Professor of Quantum Physics and Quantum Technology at the University of Sydney, and the CEO and founder of Q-Ctrl, a quantum technology company. He is a former technical consultant to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) on quantum technology and a former research fellow at the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Michael, through his academic appointment, is a Chief Investigator in the ARC Centre for Engineered Quantum and is funded by U.S. defense and intelligence agencies.

Richard Fontaine is the President of the Center for a New American Security. He has worked at the State Department, on the National Security Council Staff, as foreign policy advisor to Senator John McCain and deputy staff director on the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Image: Air Force/Rendering by Bo Sun

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Emerging technology could make China the world’s next innovation superpower
By Elsa Kania, opinion contributor — 11/06/17 06:00 AM EST 43
The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the view of The Hill
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During China’s 19th Party Congress in October, President Xi Jinping placed innovation at the center of China’s national strategy. His remarks called for building China into a “science and technology superpower,” particularly as an “aerospace superpower” and “cyber superpower.” He highlighted notable achievements, including Mozi, the world’s first quantum satellite, and China’s space lab, Tiangong.

His remarks underscored that, under his leadership, China has pursued a strategy of innovation-driven development and sought to leverage the potential of the internet, big data and artificial intelligence (AI). If successful, China’s emergence as a leading power in innovation could shift the strategic balance.

Xi Jinping has recognized that innovation is a critical determinant of national power and competitiveness. This techno-nationalism is not new, but rather there is a long history of China’s pursuit of indigenous innovation. The “Two Bombs, One Satellite” project of the 1960s and ‘70s, through which China built its first atomic bomb, hydrogen bomb and satellites — at a time when such achievements seemed well beyond its reach — remains a resonant historical example of successful “moonshot” projects that enhanced national power. Today, China is devoting itself to a similarly ambitious agenda through a series of mega-projects, including in artificial intelligence and quantum information science, while avidly pursuing advances in such strategic emerging technologies as nanotechnology and biotechnology.

China has declared its intention to lead the world in AI by 2030, seeking to become the “premier global AI innovation center.” The New Generation AI Development Plan, reportedly a multibillion-dollar initiative, charts an ambitious course to build a $150 billion AI industry by 2030. The plan will also support research and development of next-generation AI technologies that could result in paradigm shifts in the field, including brain-inspired neural network architectures and quantum-accelerated machine learning.


To date, China has established new national engineering laboratories focused on deep learning, virtual and augmented reality, and brain-inspired intelligence, along with over a dozen for big data technologies and applications.

Concurrently, China is positioning itself to lead the second quantum revolution, which will enable such transformative technologies as quantum communications, quantum computing, and quantum metrology. Within the foreseeable future, China’s most sensitive military, government, and commercial communications could be secured through quantum cryptography. Chinese scientists are also striving to reach the forefront of the global advances in quantum computing, looking to achieve the milestone of quantum supremacy as soon as 2018.

China is also building the National Laboratory for Quantum Information Science, which will become the world’s largest quantum research facility. This new national laboratory will pursue advances in quantum computing and reportedly engage in research “of immediate use” to China’s military.

Traditionally, innovation has been a core aspect of U.S. national competitiveness and military power, but today the U.S. confronts the risk of an “innovation deficit” due to declining investment in basic science. Certainly, such dynamic innovation ecosystems as Silicon Valley and Boston remain critical centers of innovation. However, the time horizons — and resources — of the private sector often don’t extend to such ambitious “moonshot” projects as China is now pursuing. Historically, the U.S. government has played a vital role in enabling innovation, whether in the space race or the invention of the Internet. As international competition in critical disruptive technologies intensifies, the trajectory of American leadership will again depend on our ability to leverage such strategic competition as an impetus for rapid advances.

In response to China’s emergence as an innovation superpower, the U.S. must pursue a long-term, whole-of-nation strategy to ensure future competitiveness. The U.S. should take action to mitigate illicit and problematic technology transfers, such as through the proposed reforms to CFIUS.

However, being on the defensive is not enough. The U.S. must actively invest in key technological domains integral to future economic dynamism and military power — including artificial intelligence, quantum information science, and biotechnology — while leveraging public-private partnerships.

Since talent remains a key aspect of American advantage, it is vital for the U.S. to continue to compete to attract the world’s top talent.

The U.S. must also focus on education and training to create a robust human capital pipeline. In the AI revolution, data, too, is a strategic resource, and its availability, as determined by policy and regulatory parameters, a key enabler of innovation.

Looking forward, the future prospects for U.S. power will depend this decision: the choice of whether to compete, or risk ceding technological dominance to an ambitious rising power.

Elsa B. Kania is an adjunct fellow with the Technology and National Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, where her research focuses on Chinese defense innovation and emerging technologies.

Tags Elsa Kania Emerging technologies Technology Quantum information science Innovation Quantum information Science and technology Artificial intelligence Theoretical computer science Quantum computing
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