The Role of Quantum Computing in Advancing Scientific High-Performance Computing: A perspective from the ADAC Institute
Gilles Buchs, Thomas Beck, Ryan Bennink, Daniel Claudino, Andrea Delgado, Nur Aiman Fadel, Peter Groszkowski, Kathleen Hamilton, Travis Humble, Neeraj Kumar, Ang Li, Phillip Lotshaw, Olli Mukkula, Ryousei Takano, Amit Saxena, In-Saeng Suh, Miwako Tsuji, Roel Van Beeumen

TL;DR
This paper explores how quantum computing can complement high-performance computing, emphasizing hybrid systems, current challenges, and the role of ADAC in fostering collaboration for integrating QC into HPC.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the current state, challenges, and strategic directions for integrating quantum computing with HPC, based on insights from the ADAC Institute.
Findings
Quantum computing faces scalability and error rate challenges.
Hybrid HPC-QC systems are prioritized for future supercomputing.
ADAC's Quantum Computing Working Group promotes collaboration and strategic development.
Abstract
Quantum computing (QC) has gained significant attention over the past two decades due to its potential for speeding up classically demanding tasks. This transition from an academic focus to a thriving commercial sector is reflected in substantial global investments. While advancements in qubit counts and functionalities continues at a rapid pace, current quantum systems still lack the scalability for practical applications, facing challenges such as too high error rates and limited coherence times. This perspective paper examines the relationship between QC and high-performance computing (HPC), highlighting their complementary roles in enhancing computational efficiency. It is widely acknowledged that even fully error-corrected QCs will not be suited for all computational task. Rather, future compute infrastructures are anticipated to employ quantum acceleration within hybrid systems…
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