A Case for Variability-Aware Policies for NISQ-Era Quantum Computers
Swamit S. Tannu, Moinuddin K.Qureshi

TL;DR
This paper investigates the variability in error rates of qubits and links in NISQ-era quantum computers, proposing variability-aware policies for qubit allocation and movement that significantly enhance system reliability.
Contribution
It introduces variation-aware policies for qubit management in NISQ devices, leveraging error rate variability to improve reliability and performance.
Findings
Significant variability exists in qubit and link error rates.
Variation-aware policies improve system reliability up to 2.5x.
Characterization data over 52 days confirms error rate fluctuations.
Abstract
Recently, IBM, Google, and Intel showcased quantum computers ranging from 49 to 72 qubits. While these systems represent a significant milestone in the advancement of quantum computing, existing and near-term quantum computers are not yet large enough to fully support quantum error-correction. Such systems with few tens to few hundreds of qubits are termed as Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum computers (NISQ), and these systems can provide benefits for a class of quantum algorithms. In this paper, we study the problems of Qubit-Allocation (mapping of program qubits to machine qubits) and Qubit-Movement(routing qubits from one location to another to perform entanglement). We observe that there exists variation in the error rates of different qubits and links, which can have an impact on the decisions for qubit movement and qubit allocation. We analyze characterization data for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
