A proposed superconducting circuit quantum annealer with fully programmable all-to-all coupling

ORAL

Abstract

A grand challenge for quantum annealing is the development of annealing hardware that allows fully programmable all-to-all connectivity between logical qubits, with the lowest possible overhead in physical resources. The LHZ [1] scheme achieves fully programmable all-to-all connectivity with a planar architecture that is amenable to implementation with superconducting circuits [2], but does so at a cost of O(N2) physical qubits to realize N logical qubits. We propose a novel architecture for a superconducting circuit quantum annealer that requires only N physical qubits to realize N logical qubits, and present analytical and numerical evidence that fully connected and programmable quantum annealers with N=1000 logical qubits can be constructed with technology that requires only modest improvements over what currently exists.

[1] W. Lechner, et al. Science Advances 1, 9, e1500838 (2015).
[2] S. Puri, et al. Nature Communications 8, 15785 (2017).

*This work was partially supported by a Stanford Nano- and Quantum Science and Engineering Postdoctoral Fellowship, and by the Impulsing Paradigm Change through Disruptive Technologies (ImPACT) Program of the Council of Science, Technology and Innovation (Cabinet Office, Government of Japan).

Presenters

  • Peter McMahon

    • Stanford University
    • E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University

Authors

  • Peter McMahon

    • Stanford University
    • E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Tatsuhiro Onodera

    • Stanford University
    • E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University
  • Edwin Ng

    • Stanford University
    • E. L. Ginzton Laboratory, Stanford University