A Time Optimization Framework for the Implementation of Robust and Low-latency Quantum Circuits
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2412.18533v1
- Date: Tue, 24 Dec 2024 16:26:05 GMT
- Title: A Time Optimization Framework for the Implementation of Robust and Low-latency Quantum Circuits
- Authors: Eduardo Willwock Lussi, Rafael de Santiago, Eduardo Inacio Duzzioni,
- Abstract summary: We introduce an alternative pulse scheduling approach that enables the use of both fast and robust quantum gates within the same quantum circuit.
Experiments conducted on IBMQ Brisbane show that this approach improves the absolute success probability of quantum circuit execution by more than 25%.
- Score: 0.0
- License:
- Abstract: Quantum computing has garnered attention for its potential to solve complex computational problems with considerable speedup. Despite notable advancements in the field, achieving meaningful scalability and noise control in quantum hardware remains challenging. Incoherent errors caused by decoherence restrict the total computation time, making it very short. While hardware advancements continue to progress, quantum software specialists seek to minimize quantum circuit latency to mitigate dissipation. However, at the pulse level, fast quantum gates often lead to leakage, leaving minimal room for further optimization. Recent advancements have shown the effectiveness of quantum control techniques in generating quantum gates robust to coherent error sources. Nevertheless, these techniques come with a trade-off -- extended gate durations. In this paper, we introduce an alternative pulse scheduling approach that enables the use of both fast and robust quantum gates within the same quantum circuit. The time-optimization framework models the quantum circuit as a dependency graph, implements the fastest quantum gates on the critical path, and uses idle periods outside the critical path to optimally implement longer, more robust gates from the gate set, without increasing latency. Experiments conducted on IBMQ Brisbane show that this approach improves the absolute success probability of quantum circuit execution by more than 25%, with performance gains scaling as the number of qubits increases.
Related papers
- Robust Implementation of Discrete-time Quantum Walks in Any Finite-dimensional Quantum System [2.646968944595457]
discrete-time quantum walk (DTQW) model one of most suitable choices for circuit implementation.
In this paper, we have successfully cut down the circuit cost concerning gate count and circuit depth by half.
For the engineering excellence of our proposed approach, we implement DTQW in any finite-dimensional quantum system with akin efficiency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-08-01T13:07:13Z) - Quantum Compiling with Reinforcement Learning on a Superconducting Processor [55.135709564322624]
We develop a reinforcement learning-based quantum compiler for a superconducting processor.
We demonstrate its capability of discovering novel and hardware-amenable circuits with short lengths.
Our study exemplifies the codesign of the software with hardware for efficient quantum compilation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-06-18T01:49:48Z) - On Reducing the Execution Latency of Superconducting Quantum Processors via Quantum Program Scheduling [48.142860424323395]
We introduce the Quantum Program Scheduling Problem (QPSP) to improve the utility efficiency of quantum resources.
Specifically, a quantum program scheduling method concerning the circuit width, number of measurement shots, and submission time of quantum programs is proposed to reduce the execution latency.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-04-11T16:12:01Z) - QuantumSEA: In-Time Sparse Exploration for Noise Adaptive Quantum
Circuits [82.50620782471485]
QuantumSEA is an in-time sparse exploration for noise-adaptive quantum circuits.
It aims to achieve two key objectives: (1) implicit circuits capacity during training and (2) noise robustness.
Our method establishes state-of-the-art results with only half the number of quantum gates and 2x time saving of circuit executions.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-01-10T22:33:00Z) - QuBEC: Boosting Equivalence Checking for Quantum Circuits with QEC
Embedding [4.15692939468851]
We propose a Decision Diagram-based quantum equivalence checking approach, QuBEC, that requires less latency compared to existing techniques.
Our proposed methodology reduces verification time on certain benchmark circuits by up to $271.49 times$.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-19T16:12:37Z) - Near-Term Distributed Quantum Computation using Mean-Field Corrections
and Auxiliary Qubits [77.04894470683776]
We propose near-term distributed quantum computing that involve limited information transfer and conservative entanglement production.
We build upon these concepts to produce an approximate circuit-cutting technique for the fragmented pre-training of variational quantum algorithms.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-11T18:00:00Z) - Time-optimal universal quantum gates on superconducting circuits [1.5512702032483539]
We propose a scheme to realize universal quantum gates on superconducting qubits in a two-dimensional square lattice configuration.
In order to reduce the influence of the dephasing error, decoherence-free subspace encoding is also incorporated in our physical implementation.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-09T13:41:56Z) - Hybrid Gate-Pulse Model for Variational Quantum Algorithms [33.73469431747376]
Current quantum programs are mostly compiled on the gate-level, where quantum circuits are composed of quantum gates.
pulse-level optimization has gained more attention from researchers due to their advantages in terms of circuit duration.
We present a hybrid gate-pulse model that can mitigate these problems.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-12-01T17:06:35Z) - Error Mitigation in Quantum Computers through Instruction Scheduling [7.0230815242347475]
Current quantum devices suffer from the rapid accumulation of error that prevents the storage of quantum information over extended periods.
This paper presents TimeStitch, a framework that pinpoints the optimum execution schedules for single-qubit gates within quantum circuits.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-05-04T20:58:58Z) - Quantum circuit architecture search for variational quantum algorithms [88.71725630554758]
We propose a resource and runtime efficient scheme termed quantum architecture search (QAS)
QAS automatically seeks a near-optimal ansatz to balance benefits and side-effects brought by adding more noisy quantum gates.
We implement QAS on both the numerical simulator and real quantum hardware, via the IBM cloud, to accomplish data classification and quantum chemistry tasks.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-20T12:06:27Z) - Boundaries of quantum supremacy via random circuit sampling [69.16452769334367]
Google's recent quantum supremacy experiment heralded a transition point where quantum computing performed a computational task, random circuit sampling.
We examine the constraints of the observed quantum runtime advantage in a larger number of qubits and gates.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-05-05T20:11:53Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.