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Daily Quantum Computing Research & News • July 17, 2026 • 05:19 CST

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📊 Today's Data Collection

Highlights: 5 top items selected
News items: 9 articles gathered
Technology papers: 10 papers fetched
Company papers: 8 papers from major players
Featured papers: 5 papers collected
Total sources: 6 data feeds processed

🌟 Highlights

⭐ TOP PAPER

LDGM-Based Quantum Codes for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computation

Yumin Li, Kejing Liu, Hanqing Lou, Javier Garcia-Frias2026-07-16T16:02 Score: 0.41
We construct a new family of Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) codes using the generator and parity-check matrices of Low-Density Generator Matrix (LDGM) codes, with row operations applied to both matrices...
⭐ TOP PAPER

The potential of quantum computers for Particle Image Velocimetry

Philipp Pfeffer, Theo Käufer, Julia Ingelmann, Christian Cierpka, Jörg Schumacher2026-07-15T09:32 Score: 0.39
Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) is the prime image-processing technique to measure and visualize velocity fields of laminar and turbulent flows. The velocity field vectors are obtained with sub-pixel...

📰 News Items

🚀 Flagship Papers and Tools

🛠️ QuantumGraph

Learning Tool
QuantumGraph organizes quantum computing concepts into a connected graph, where each topic links to related ideas and prerequisites, making it easy to see how concepts fit together and build knowledge step by step.
Breakthrough

Surface code scaling on heavy‑hex superconducting quantum processors

USC21-Oct-25
Demonstrating subthreshold scaling of a surface-code quantum memory on hardware whose native connectivity does not match the code remains a central challenge. We address this on IBM heavy-hex superconducting processors by co-designing the code embedding and control: a depth-minimizing SWAP-based "fold-unfold" embedding that uses bridge ancillas, together with robust, gap-aware dynamical decoupling (DD). On Heron-generation devices we perform anisotropic scaling from a uniform distance 3 code to anisotropic distance (dx,dz) = (3,5) and (5,3) codes. We find that increasing dz (dx) improves the protection of Z-basis (X-basis) logical states across multiple quantum error correction cycles. Even if global subthreshold code scaling for arbitrary logical initial states is not yet achieved, we argue that it is within reach with minor hardware improvements. We show that DD plays a major role: it suppresses coherent ZZ crosstalk and non-Markovian dephasing that accumulate during idle gaps on heavy-hex layouts, and it eliminates spurious subthreshold claims that arise when scaled codes without DD are compared against smaller codes with DD. To quantify performance, we derive an entanglement fidelity metric that is computed directly from X- and Z-basis logical-error data and provides per-cycle, SPAM-aware bounds. The entanglement fidelity metric reveals that widely used single-parameter fits used to compute suppression factors can mischaracterize or obscure code performance when their assumptions are violated; we identify the strong assumptions of stationarity, unitality, and negligible logical SPAM required for those fits to be valid and show that they do not hold for our data. Our results establish a concrete path to robust tests of subthreshold surface-code scaling under biased, non-Markovian noise by integrating QEC with optimized DD on non-native architectures.
Overview

Architectural mechanisms of a universal fault-tolerant quantum computer

QuEra Computing, Harvard, MIT and others25-Jun-25
Quantum error correction (QEC) is believed to be essential for the realization of large-scale quantum computers. However, due to the complexity of operating on the encoded `logical' qubits, understanding the physical principles for building fault-tolerant quantum devices and combining them into efficient architectures is an outstanding scientific challenge. Here we utilize reconfigurable arrays of up to 448 neutral atoms to implement all key elements of a universal, fault-tolerant quantum processing architecture and experimentally explore their underlying working mechanisms. We first employ surface codes to study how repeated QEC suppresses errors, demonstrating 2.14(13)x below-threshold performance in a four-round characterization circuit by leveraging atom loss detection and machine learning decoding. We then investigate logical entanglement using transversal gates and lattice surgery, and extend it to universal logic through transversal teleportation with 3D [[15,1,3]] codes, enabling arbitrary-angle synthesis with logarithmic overhead. Finally, we develop mid-circuit qubit re-use, increasing experimental cycle rates by two orders of magnitude and enabling deep-circuit protocols with dozens of logical qubits and hundreds of logical teleportations with [[7,1,3]] and high-rate [[16,6,4]] codes while maintaining constant internal entropy. Our experiments reveal key principles for efficient architecture design, involving the interplay between quantum logic and entropy removal, judiciously using physical entanglement in logic gates and magic state generation, and leveraging teleportations for universality and physical qubit reset. These results establish foundations for scalable, universal error-corrected processing and its practical implementation with neutral atom systems.
Breakthrough

Constructive interference at the edge of quantum ergodic dynamics

Google Quantum AI and Collaborators11-Jun-25
Quantum observables in the form of few-point correlators are the key to characterizing the dynamics of quantum many-body systems. In dynamics with fast entanglement generation, quantum observables generally become insensitive to the details of the underlying dynamics at long times due to the effects of scrambling. In experimental systems, repeated time-reversal protocols have been successfully implemented to restore sensitivities of quantum observables. Using a 103-qubit superconducting quantum processor, we characterize ergodic dynamics using the second-order out-of-time-order correlators, OTOC. In contrast to dynamics without time reversal, OTOC are observed to remain sensitive to the underlying dynamics at long time scales. Furthermore, by inserting Pauli operators during quantum evolution and randomizing the phases of Pauli strings in the Heisenberg picture, we observe substantial changes in OTOC values. This indicates that OTOC is dominated by constructive interference between Pauli strings that form large loops in configuration space. The observed interference mechanism endows OTOC with a high degree of classical simulation complexity, which culminates in a set of large-scale OTOC measurements exceeding the simulation capacity of known classical algorithms. Further supported by an example of Hamiltonian learning through OTOC, our results indicate a viable path to practical quantum advantage.
Breakthrough

Demonstrating real-time and low-latency quantum error correction with superconducting qubits

Rigetti Computing and Riverlane7-Oct-24
Quantum error correction (QEC) will be essential to achieve the accuracy needed for quantum computers to realise their full potential. The field has seen promising progress with demonstrations of early QEC and real-time decoded experiments. As quantum computers advance towards demonstrating a universal fault-tolerant logical gate set, implementing scalable and low-latency real-time decoding will be crucial to prevent the backlog problem, avoiding an exponential slowdown and maintaining a fast logical clock rate. Here, we demonstrate low-latency feedback with a scalable FPGA decoder integrated into the control system of a superconducting quantum processor. We perform an 8-qubit stability experiment with up to decoding rounds and a mean decoding time per round below, showing that we avoid the backlog problem even on superconducting hardware with the strictest speed requirements. We observe logical error suppression as the number of decoding rounds is increased. We also implement and time a fast-feedback experiment demonstrating a decoding response time of for a total of measurement rounds. The decoder throughput and latency developed in this work, combined with continued device improvements, unlock the next generation of experiments that go beyond purely keeping logical qubits alive and into demonstrating building blocks of fault-tolerant computation, such as lattice surgery and magic state teleportation.
Overview

IBM Quantum Computers: Evolution, Performance, and Future Directions

Muhammad AbuGhanem17-Sep-24
Quantum computers represent a transformative frontier in computational technology, promising exponential speedups beyond classical computing limits. IBM Quantum has led significant advancements in both hardware and software, providing access to quantum hardware via IBM Cloud® since 2016, achieving a milestone with the world's first accessible quantum computer. This article explores IBM's quantum computing journey, focusing on the development of practical quantum computers. We summarize the evolution and advancements of IBM Quantum's processors across generations, including their recent breakthrough surpassing the 1,000-qubit barrier. The paper reviews detailed performance metrics across various hardware, tracing their evolution over time and highlighting IBM Quantum's transition from the noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computing era towards fault-tolerant quantum computing capabilities.
Overview

Comparison of Superconducting NISQ Architectures

Lincoln Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology3-Sep-24
Advances in quantum hardware have begun the noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computing era. A pressing question is: what architectures are best suited to take advantage of this new regime of quantum machines? We study various superconducting architectures including Google's Sycamore, IBM's Heavy-Hex, Rigetti's Aspen and Ankaa in addition to a proposed architecture we call bus next-nearest neighbor (busNNN). We evaluate these architectures using benchmarks based on the quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA) which can solve certain quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) problems. We also study compilation tools that target these architectures, which use either general heuristic or deterministic methods to map circuits onto a target topology defined by an architecture.
Breakthrough

Quantum error correction below the surface code threshold

Google Quantum AI and Collaborators24-Aug-24
Quantum error correction provides a path to reach practical quantum computing by combining multiple physical qubits into a logical qubit, where the logical error rate is suppressed exponentially as more qubits are added. However, this exponential suppression only occurs if the physical error rate is below a critical threshold. In this work, we present two surface code memories operating below this threshold: a distance-7 code and a distance-5 code integrated with a real-time decoder. The logical error rate of our larger quantum memory is suppressed...Our results present device performance that, if scaled, could realize the operational requirements of large scale fault-tolerant quantum algorithms.

📄 Technology Papers

Designing quantum technologies with a quantum computer

Juan Naranjo, Thi Ha Kyaw, Gaurav Saxena, Kevin Ferreira, Jack S. BakerPublished: 2026-01-29
Interacting spin systems in solids underpin a wide range of quantum technologies, from quantum sensors and single-photon sources to spin-defect-based quantum registers and processors. We develop a quantum-computer-aided framework for simulating such devices using a general many-body electron-spin-resonance Hamiltonian that incorporates zero-field splitting, the Zeeman effect, hyperfine interaction...

LDGM-Based Quantum Codes for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computation

Yumin Li, Kejing Liu, Hanqing Lou, Javier Garcia-FriasPublished: 2026-07-16
We construct a new family of Calderbank-Shor-Steane (CSS) codes using the generator and parity-check matrices of Low-Density Generator Matrix (LDGM) codes, with row operations applied to both matrices in order to achieve the desired quantum rate. Decoding is performed in an iterative manner, by applying message passing over the associated graph, and discrete Density Evolution (DDE) is used to opti...

A framework of partial error correction for intermediate-scale quantum computers

Nikolaos Koukoulekidis, Samson Wang, Tom O'Leary, Daniel Bultrini, Lukasz Cincio, Piotr CzarnikPublished: 2023-06-27
As quantum computing hardware steadily increases in qubit count and quality, one important question is how to allocate these resources to mitigate the effects of hardware noise. In a transitional era between noisy small-scale and fully fault-tolerant systems, we envisage a scenario in which we are only able to error-correct a fraction of the qubits required to perform an interesting computation. I...

Improving Dynamical Decoupling for Trapped-Ion QCCD Quantum Computers

William M. Watkins, Leigh M. Norris, Ross Hutson, Maxwell Urmey, Peter Siegfried, Charles H. BaldwinPublished: 2026-07-16
We examine the impact of scheduling errors on dynamical decoupling (DD) in trapped-ion quantum charge-coupled devices (QCCDs) and develop better strategies for reducing memory errors. In the QCCD architecture, qubit transport and control introduce stochastic pulse delays that impact the efficiency of DD. Using the filter-function formalism, we analyze the performance of DD in the presence of sched...

Improving Student Self-Confidence in Quantum Computing with the Qubit Touchdown Board Game

Kristina Armbruster, Gintaras Duda, Thomas G. WongPublished: 2025-01-14
Qubit Touchdown is a two-player, competitive board game that was developed to introduce students to quantum computing. A quantum computer is a new kind of computer that is based on the laws of quantum physics, and it can solve certain problems faster than normal computers because it follows a different set of rules. Qubit Touchdown's game play mirrors the rules of (American) football, with players...

Emulation of Entanglement Distribution Networks on a Quantum Computer

Ashley N. Tittelbaugh, Jerry Horgan, Rohan Bali, Marco Ruffini, Daniel C. Kilper, Shelbi L. Jenkins, Boulat A. BashPublished: 2026-07-15
We investigate how quantum computers can be used to emulate quantum networks and study their performance under practical impairments. In particular, we evaluate how degraded entanglement and communication latency affect teleportation-based distributed multipartite-entanglement-state construction. We model imperfect Bell-pair sources using depolarizing noise channels and classical communication del...

Basis Adaptive Algorithm for Quantum Many-Body Systems on Quantum Computers

Anutosh Biswas, Sayan Ghosh, Ritajit Majumdar, Mostafizur Rahaman Laskar, Nicholas Bronn, Manoranjan KumarPublished: 2025-12-14
We introduce a Basis Adaptive (BA) algorithm for hybrid quantum-classical simulation of correlated quantum many-body systems. Starting from a small set of physically motivated bitstrings, the algorithm iteratively applies a single-step first-order Trotterized circuit on a quantum processor, filters the sampled configurations by enforcing $U(1)$ spin conservation and lattice reflection symmetry, an...

Universal Quantum Computation with Multi-Mode Schrödinger Cat States Stabilized by Non-Local Dissipation Engineering

Jesper Lind-Olsen, Jonas Lidal, Tron Omland, Joakim BergliPublished: 2026-07-15
Schrödinger cat states provide a hardware-efficient platform for bosonic quantum error correction by encoding logical information in protected manifolds of harmonic oscillators. While previous work has demonstrated the dissipative stabilization of multi-mode Schrödinger cat states as robust quantum memories, a framework for universal quantum computation has remained unavailable. Here we extend thi...

Machine learning development for quantum computing and neutrino physics

Annalisa De LorenzisPublished: 2026-07-15
This thesis investigates the application of machine-learning methods in the context of quantum computing and neutrino physics, with particular emphasis on the construction of effective representations for complex, high-dimensional data. The first part of the work is devoted to Quantum Extreme Learning Machines (QELMs), a hybrid quantum--classical framework in which classical data are encoded into ...

The potential of quantum computers for Particle Image Velocimetry

Philipp Pfeffer, Theo Käufer, Julia Ingelmann, Christian Cierpka, Jörg SchumacherPublished: 2026-07-15
Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) is the prime image-processing technique to measure and visualize velocity fields of laminar and turbulent flows. The velocity field vectors are obtained with sub-pixelaccuracy by analyzing cross-correlations, empowered by Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT). Here, we present a quantum algorithm with multidimensional quantum Fourier Transforms, termed Quantum-based PIV (Q...

🏢 Company Papers

Workload-Driven Optimization for On-Device Real-Time Subtitle Translation

Tsz-To WongPublished: 2026-07-10
This report studies on-device English-to-Traditional-Chinese subtitle translation for Taiwan under short inputs, short outputs, batch-size-one inference, low latency, and privacy constraints. These conditions limit the value of optimizations designed for long-context or high-throughput language-model serving. Starting from LMT-60-0.6B, preliminary profiling suggests that vocabulary projection beco...

Adaptive Sampling for Spatiotemporal Anomaly Monitoring in Wireless Sensor Networks

Guoqing Lu, Yixuan Sun, Yiwen Jiang, Bernard ButlerPublished: 2026-07-16
Long-term environmental monitoring in wireless sensor networks (WSNs) often uses sparse sampling to extend network lifetime, but sparse sensing can miss short-lived, localized, and potentially diffusive anomalies. This paper proposes a sentinel-assisted adaptive sampling framework as a cooperative sensing-control pipeline for WSN anomaly monitoring. During normal periods, nodes perform sparse sens...

Designing quantum technologies with a quantum computer

Juan Naranjo, Thi Ha Kyaw, Gaurav Saxena, Kevin Ferreira, Jack S. BakerPublished: 2026-01-29
Interacting spin systems in solids underpin a wide range of quantum technologies, from quantum sensors and single-photon sources to spin-defect-based quantum registers and processors. We develop a quantum-computer-aided framework for simulating such devices using a general many-body electron-spin-resonance Hamiltonian that incorporates zero-field splitting, the Zeeman effect, hyperfine interaction...

SQD-Enabled Circuit Compression for Resource-Efficient Quantum Chemistry

Kangyu Zheng, Yidong Zhou, Jinglei Cheng, Zhemin Zhang, Shaohua Li, Zhiding LiangPublished: 2026-07-16
Subspace Quantum Diagonalization (SQD) recovers ground-state energies by classically diagonalizing a Hamiltonian in the subspace spanned by quantum samples, requiring only bitstrings with sufficient ground-state overlap rather than an accurate variational energy. We reveal and exploit this underexplored robustness property: how much non-Clifford and variational expressivity can be removed from the...

Teacher-Guided Causal Interventions for Image Denoising: Orthogonal Content-Noise Disentanglement in Vision Transformers

Kuai Jiang, Zhaoyan Ding, Guijuan Zhang, Dianjie Lu, Zhuoran ZhengPublished: 2026-03-01
Conventional image denoising models often inadvertently learn spurious correlations between environmental factors and noise patterns. Moreover, due to high-frequency ambiguity, they struggle to reliably distinguish subtle textures from stochastic noise, resulting in over-removed details or residual noise artifacts. We therefore revisit denoising via causal intervention, arguing that purely correla...

An Overview of Josephson Junctions Based QPUs

Omid Mohebi, Alireza Hesam MohseniPublished: 2025-04-03
Quantum processing units (QPUs) built on superconducting Josephson junctions remain the most industrially mature route to fault-tolerant quantum computing, but the field has moved substantially since early 2025. This paper provides an updated overview of Josephson-junction QPUs, grounded in the quantum-mechanical principles, superposition, entanglement, and decoherence, that any qubit implementati...

AI vs Human Expert Reasoning: Assessing Agreements in Building Typology Predictions based on Street View Imagery

Zahratu Shabrina, Muhammad Asa, Jin Rui, Lu Yin, Stephen LawPublished: 2026-07-16
This research investigates the potential of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) to infer building typologies: Construction, Current Use, and Storeys from Google Street View (GSV) images. Predictions generated by VLMs are compared with inference by human experts (civil engineers and architects) as a source of manually labelled ground-truth data. We evaluate several state-of-the-art VLMs, including GPT-4o...

Are Performance-Optimization Benchmarks Reliably Measuring Coding Agents?

Zhi Chen, Zhensu Sun, Yuling Shi, David Lo, Lingxiao JiangPublished: 2026-07-01
Repository-level performance-optimization benchmarks such as GSO, SWE-Perf and SWE-fficiency evaluate coding agents by applying patches to real repositories and comparing runtime against unoptimized baselines and official reference patches. Their leaderboard scores are increasingly used as evidence of coding-agent progress, but those scores can conflate runtime instability, benchmark-specific scor...

📚 BrowseAI Featured Papers

Quantum enhanced Monte Carlo simulation for photon interaction cross sections

Authors: Euimin Lee, Sangmin Lee, Shiho KimSubmitted: Submitted arXiv: arXiv:2502.14374
Abstract: …as the dominant attenuation mechanism, we demonstrate that our approach reproduces classical probability distributions with high fidelity. Simulation results obtained via the IBM Qiskit quantum simulator reveal a quadratic speedup in amplitude estimation compared to conventional Monte C...

Time-adaptive single-shot crosstalk detector on superconducting quantum computer

Authors: Haiyue Kang, Benjamin Harper, Muhammad Usman, Martin SeviorSubmitted: Submitted arXiv: arXiv:2502.14225
Abstract: …in two scenarios: simulation using an artificial noise model with gate-induced crosstalk and always-on idlings channels; and the simulation using noise sampled from an IBM quantum computer parametrised by the reduced HSA error model. The presented results show our method's efficacy hing...

Quantum simulation of a qubit with non-Hermitian Hamiltonian

Authors: Anastashia Jebraeilli, Michael R. GellerSubmitted: Submitted arXiv: arXiv:2502.13910
Abstract: …-broken regime surrounding an exceptional point. Quantum simulations are carried out using IBM superconducting qubits. The results underscore the potential for variational quantum circuits and machine learning to push the boundaries of quantum simulation, offering new methods for explor...

Comment on "Energy-speed relationship of quantum particles challenges Bohmian mechanics"

Aurélien Drezet, Dustin Lazarovici, Bernard Michael Nabet
In their recent paper [Nature 643, 67 (2025)], Sharaglazova et al. report an optical microcavity experiment yielding an "energy-speed relationship" for quantum particles in evanescent states, which they infer from the observed population transfer between two coupled waveguides. The authors argue tha...