The scientists announced their achievement at a press conference in the Shanghai Institute for Advanced Studies of University of Science and Technology of China.
Quantum computing could in some ways dwarf the processing power of today's supercomputers, according to researchers.
The manipulation of multi-particle entanglement is the core of quantum computing technology and has been the focus of international quantum computing research.
Recently, Pan Jianwei of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lu Chaoyang and Zhu Xiaobo of the University of Science and Technology of China and Wang Haohua of Zhejiang University set international records in quantum control of the maximal numbers of entangled photonic quantum bits and entangled superconducting quantum bits.
Despite substantial progress in the past two decades, building quantum machines that can actually outperform classical computers in some specific tasks - an important milestone termed"quantum supremacy" - remains challenging.
In the quest for quantum supremacy, Boson sampling - an intermediate quantum computer model - has received considerable attention, as it requires fewer physical resources than building universal optical quantum computers, Pan was quoted as saying by the state-run Xinhua news agency.
Last year, the researchers had developed the world's best single photon source based on semiconductor quantum dots.
The test results show the sampling rate of this prototype is at least 24,000 times faster than international counterparts, researchers said.
At the same time, the prototype quantum computing machine is 10 to 100 times faster than the first electronic computer, ENIAC, and the first transistor computer, TRADIC, in running the classical algorithm, Pan said.
It is the first quantum computing machine based on single photons that goes beyond the early classical computer, and ultimately paves the way to a quantum computer that can beat classical computers.
The research was published in the journal Nature Photonics.
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