June 9, 2026 brought a diverse range of advances across quantum computing infrastructure, security applications, and industrial partnerships. Researchers at the National University of Singapore's Centre for Quantum Technologies developed a self-testing quantum chip designed for digital security applications, marking progress in verifiable quantum computing systems [1]. Meanwhile, the quantum computing industry continued its infrastructure expansion with the announcement of a world-first cloud service engineered to make full use of quantum computing capacity, addressing efficiency limitations in remote access to quantum systems [2]. On the power sector front, a new roadmap outlined pathways for quantum computing to contribute to grid optimization and energy management, signaling growing interest in quantum applications for critical infrastructure [3]. These developments underscore the sector's broadening reach into security, cloud architecture, and real-world infrastructure challenges as quantum systems move toward practical deployment.
Quantum news — June 09, 2026
References
- NUS CDE researchers develop self-testing quantum chip for digital security - EurekAlert! — Google News (EN)
- World-first cloud service makes full use of quantum computing capacity - Asia Research News | — Google News (EN)
- A new roadmap shows how quantum computing could help the grid - Utility Magazine — Google News (EN)