How "Quantum" is your Quantum Computer? Macrorealism-based Benchmarking via Mid-Circuit Parity Measurements
Ben Zindorf, Lorenzo Braccini, Debarshi Das, Sougato Bose

TL;DR
This paper introduces a scalable benchmarking method for quantum computers based on Macrorealism violation via mid-circuit parity measurements, demonstrating significant improvements in quantumness detection on IBM QCs up to 38 qubits.
Contribution
The authors propose a novel, scalable, and loophole-free macrorealism-based benchmarking metric using mid-circuit parity measurements to assess quantum coherence at large qubit numbers.
Findings
Violation of Macrorealism detected up to 38 qubits on IBM QCs
The method is robust against classical disturbances within statistical error
Benchmarking shows a three-fold increase in quantumness across quantum generations
Abstract
To perform meaningful computations, Quantum Computers (QCs) must scale to macroscopic levels - i.e., to a large number of qubits - an objective pursued by most quantum companies. How to efficiently test their quantumness at these scales? We show that the violation of Macrorealism (MR), being the fact that classical systems possess definite properties that can be measured without disturbances, provide a fruitful avenue to this aim. The No Disturbance Condition (NDC) - the equality used here to test MR - can be violated by two consecutive parity measurements on qubits and found to be independent of under ideal conditions. However, realistic noisy QCs show a quantum-to-classical transition as increases, giving a foundationally-motivated scalable benchmarking metric. Two methods are formulated to implement this metric: one that involves a mid-circuit measurement, probing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Quantum Mechanics and Applications · Quantum Information and Cryptography
