Let Each Quantum Bit Choose Its Basis Gates
Sophia Fuhui Lin, Sara Sussman, Casey Duckering, Pranav S. Mundada,, Jonathan M. Baker, Rohan S. Kumar, Andrew A. Houck, Frederic T. Chong

TL;DR
This paper proposes allowing each pair of qubits in a quantum computer to select its own optimal basis gates, enabling faster, more efficient quantum operations and improved scalability in near-term quantum devices.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework and practical methods for calibrating and compiling with nonstandard 2Q basis gates tailored to specific qubit pairs.
Findings
Achieved up to 8x speed improvement over baseline gates
Demonstrated effective compilation of standard algorithms like QFT and QAOA
Validated methods through simulations with transmon qubits
Abstract
Near-term quantum computers are primarily limited by errors in quantum operations (or gates) between two quantum bits (or qubits). A physical machine typically provides a set of basis gates that include primitive 2-qubit (2Q) and 1-qubit (1Q) gates that can be implemented in a given technology. 2Q entangling gates, coupled with some 1Q gates, allow for universal quantum computation. In superconducting technologies, the current state of the art is to implement the same 2Q gate between every pair of qubits (typically an XX- or XY-type gate). This strict hardware uniformity requirement for 2Q gates in a large quantum computer has made scaling up a time and resource-intensive endeavor in the lab. We propose a radical idea -- allow the 2Q basis gate(s) to differ between every pair of qubits, selecting the best entangling gates that can be calibrated between given pairs of qubits. This work…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum-Dot Cellular Automata · Quantum Information and Cryptography
