Projecting requirements for superconducting qubit systems at utility scale applications
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
How big would a quantum computer need to be to solve problems that are intractable on classical hardware? We present a method, built on the measurement-based quantum computing paradigm, to estimate the resources required to execute fault-tolerant applications at a scale large enough to solve useful problems. When provided with an algorithm and a specific superconducting qubit architecture, the framework produces an estimate of required resources to execute that algorithm. The architecture considered consists of individual modules filled with a square lattice of transmon qubits connected to each other via a coherent quantum interconnect. We use our method to estimate hardware resource requirements for a range of quantum signal processing applications, up to problem sizes known to be challenging for classical tensor-network methods. We can also quantify the bottlenecks and tradeoffs in chip design, module interconnectivity, and thermal management and measure their impact on the infrastructure and time required to execute a given application.
*"The views, opinions and/or findings expressed are those of the author(s) and should not be interpreted as representing the official views or policies of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government. This research was developed with funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under Agreement HR00112230006."
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Presenters
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Josh Y Mutus
- Rigetti Computing, Inc.
- Rigetti Quantum Computing
- Rigetti Computing Inc