Hanyuan-2 pairs two neutral-atom processor cores in one cabinet, which CAS Cold Atom Technology describes as the world’s first dual-core neutral-atom quantum computer.
The launch highlights a shift away from ever-larger single chips as physics, fabrication and wiring constraints make monolithic quantum processors harder to scale.
Modular quantum computing instead links smaller processors so they act as one machine, either by networking identical modules or combining different qubit types for specialized tasks.
Examples already span Xanadu’s 35-chip, 12-qubit Aurora system, IBM’s System Two roadmap and DARPA’s 2026 HARQ program, underscoring that interconnects are becoming central to useful quantum systems.
Independent benchmarks for Hanyuan-2 are still absent, but the debut suggests China is also backing modular architectures as a path toward larger quantum data-center-style machines.
Is combining different quantum technologies the fastest path to a useful machine, or an impossibly complex engineering detour?
With quantum's pivot to modularity, is the interconnect now more valuable than the qubit itself?