Supercomputer simulations of transmon quantum computers
Dennis Willsch

TL;DR
This paper presents a scalable supercomputer-based simulator for transmon quantum computers, accurately modeling complex effects and validating results against real IBM Q processors, advancing quantum hardware understanding and error correction.
Contribution
The authors develop a comprehensive, scalable simulation framework for transmon quantum computers that includes nontrivial effects and can be used to predict and improve real quantum hardware performance.
Findings
High fidelity simulation of up to 16 transmons and resonators.
Nearly perfect agreement between simulation and IBM Q experiments.
Quantum error correction protocols improve system performance.
Abstract
We develop a simulator for quantum computers composed of superconducting transmon qubits. The simulation model supports an arbitrary number of transmons and resonators. Quantum gates are implemented by time-dependent pulses. Nontrivial effects such as crosstalk, leakage to non-computational states, entanglement between transmons and resonators, and control errors due to the pulses are inherently included. The time evolution of the quantum computer is obtained by solving the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation. The simulation algorithm shows excellent scalability on high-performance supercomputers. We present results for the simulation of up to 16 transmons and resonators. Additionally, the model can be used to simulate environments, and we demonstrate the transition from an isolated system to an open quantum system governed by a Lindblad master equation. We also describe a procedure…
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