Maximilian Schier, Lea Richtmann, Christian Staufenbiel, Tobias Schmale, Daniel Borcherding, Michèle Heurs, Bodo Rosenhahn • Published: 2026-05-21
Scalable trapped-ion quantum computing is commonly realized with modular chips that feature distinct zones with specific functionalities, such as storage, state preparation, and gate execution. To execute a quantum circuit, the ions must be transported between these zones. This process is called ion shuttling. To achieve reliable computation results, the shuttling process must be optimized. Howeve...
Sanjiang Li • Published: 2026-05-21
Minimising EPR consumption is the dominant objective when routing a quantum circuit on a distributed quantum computer (DQC). We present dSABRE, a SABRE-style router for multi-core processors that, on each iteration of a lookahead-driven loop, first resolves any intra-core front-layer gates by SWAP scoring and only falls back to scoring inter-core teleportation candidates when the intra-core front ...
Won Joon Yun, Dhilan Nag, Sneha Ballabh, Jiapeng Zhao, Eneet Kaur, Poulami Das • Published: 2026-05-20
Distributed Quantum Computers (DQCs) enable large system sizes by connecting smaller chips via photonic interconnects. DQCs use teleportation to relocate qubits and execute CNOTs between qubits on different chips. However, non-local CNOTs are 4.3-7.7$\times$ slower and 4$\times$ more error-prone than local CNOTs within a chip, which degrades program fidelities. Existing compilers group CNOTs with ...
Sima Bahrani, Romerson D. Oliveira, Juan Marcelo Parra-Ullauri, Rui Wang, Dimitra Simeonidou • Published: 2024-09-19
Distributed quantum computing (DQC) has emerged as a promising approach to overcome the scalability limitations of monolithic quantum processors in terms of computational capability. However, realising the full potential of DQC requires effective resource management and circuit scheduling. This involves efficiently assigning each circuit to a subset of quantum processing units (QPUs), based on fac...
Austin Braniff, Fengqi You, Yuhe Tian • Published: 2026-05-20
In this work, we present quantum reinforcement learning (RL) as a solution strategy for process synthesis problems. Building on our prior work, we develop a generalized framework that formally poses process synthesis as a Markov decision process and introduces quantum-enhanced RL algorithms to solve it with improved scalability. Earlier implementations of quantum-based RL for process synthesis wer...
Anna Aubele, Gregor Bayer, Tim R. Eichhorn, Tobias Hahn, Fedor Jelezko, Paul Mentzel, Philipp Neumann, Matthias Pfender, Martin B. Plenio, Alex Retzker, Simon Roggors, Alon Salhov, Jochen Scharpf, Tobias A. Schaub, Nico Striegler, Thomas Unden, Julia Zolg, Sella Brosh, Ilai Schwartz • Published: 2026-05-20
There is a growing consensus that large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC) necessitates high-fidelity photonic interconnects to overcome the scaling limits of monolithic architectures. However, most current platforms were not originally designed for native photonic connectivity and require significant engineering overhead. To overcome these fundamental hardware limitations, we recently...
Y. -D. Liu, X. Xu, Q. -R. Wang, D. -S. Wang • Published: 2026-05-20
In this work, we propose and study in depth a universal quantum computing architecture based on a quantum construction of transistors. Our teleportation-based quantum transistors, called ``telesistors'', are ground states of systems with symmetry-protected topological order, hence suppress certain noises and provide high-fidelity Clifford gates without the need for active error correction. This ph...
Hans De Raedt, Jiri Kraus, Andreas Herten, Vrinda Mehta, Mathis Bode, Markus Hrywniak, Kristel Michielsen, Thomas Lippert • Published: 2025-11-05
We have developed a new version of the high-performance Jülich universal quantum computer simulator (JUQCS-50) that leverages key features of the GH200 superchips as used in the JUPITER supercomputer, enabling simulations of a 50-qubit universal quantum computer for the first time. JUQCS-50 achieves this through three key innovations: (1) extending usable memory beyond GPU limits via high-bandwidt...
Maxim Sirotin, Andrei Rasputnyi, Tomáš Chlouba, Roy Shiloh, Peter Hommelhoff • Published: 2024-05-10
Free electrons interacting coherently with optical fields provide a powerful platform for quantum simulation and quantum control. For kiloelectron-volt electron energies, even optical photon emission and absorption produce appreciable quantum recoils, endowing the electron with a discrete and controllable energy ladder. Starting from relativistic quantum electrodynamics, we derive an exact recoil-...
Ferney J. Rodriguez, Luis Quiroga, Neil F. Johnson • Published: 2026-05-19
Twisted light carries orbital angular momentum (OAM) and can drive excitations of confined, interacting electrons that are dark to uniform dipolar probes. Here we show how this ``beyond-Kohn's-Theorem'' optical channel can become a concrete control primitive for quantum computing. Correlation sectors in few-electron quantum dots -- characterized by the relative angular momentum quantum number -- f...