Comparing a Few Qubit Systems for Superconducting Hardware Compatibility and Circuit Design Sensitivity in Qiskit
Hillol Biswas

TL;DR
This paper compares different qubit systems in superconducting hardware using simulations and IBM hardware to analyze circuit fidelity, noise, and material effects, aiming to improve scalable quantum circuit design.
Contribution
It introduces a framework linking circuit fidelity with hardware and material properties, tested on IBM's 127-qubit processor for specific quantum circuits.
Findings
Circuit fidelity correlates with material-limited noise levels.
Simulation and hardware results reveal trade-offs in circuit complexity and noise robustness.
Material attributes significantly impact quantum circuit reliability.
Abstract
The development of complex circuits for practical applications in the current quantum computing ecosystem is based on basic primitives such as Bell states, which provide superposition, entanglement, and coherence. The range of domain-specific quantum applications has been greatly expanded by the availability of simulators and platforms such as IBM Quantum, which are supported by Qiskit. However, disparities between ideal simulator outputs and actual quantum processing unit (QPU) executions in the Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum (NISQ) era require the application of quantum error mitigation techniques. Limitations arise from hardware constraints in superconducting qubit systems and from the limited resources of classical simulators as quantum circuits grow. Quantum decoherence, which lowers gate fidelity and builds up at the circuit level with increasing depth, is specifically caused by…
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