Paul Steinacker, Amanda E. Seedhouse, Nard Dumoulin Stuyck, Tuomo Tanttu, MengKe Feng, Santiago Serrano, Ensar Vahapoglu, Samuel K. Bartee, Philip Y. Mai, Alexis Shaw, Andreas Nickl, Sebastian Pauka, Brendan Harlech-Jones, Juan P. Dehollain, Fay E. Hudson, Kok Wai Chan, Thomas A. Ohki, David Reilly, Christopher C. Escott, Chih Hwan Yang, Wee Han Lim, Arne Laucht, Andre Saraiva, Andrew S. Dzurak, Jared H. Cole • Published: 2026-07-13
Silicon spin qubits are a leading candidate for large-scale quantum computing owing to their compatibility with semiconductor manufacturing. However, scaling to useful fault-tolerant processors will likely generate thermal loads that exceed the cooling power available at millikelvin temperatures. Raising the operating temperature eases cooling requirements but reduces gate fidelity, increasing the...
H. De Raedt, K. Michielsen • Published: 2004-06-27
This review gives a survey of numerical algorithms and software to simulate quantum computers. It covers the basic concepts of quantum computation and quantum algorithms and includes a few examples that illustrate the use of simulation software for ideal and physical models of quantum computers.
Xiaorang Guo, Jonas Winklmann, Vengkeat Chea, Martin Schulz • Published: 2026-07-13
Neutral Atom Quantum Computing (NAQC) is an emerging modality for scalable quantum computation, valued for its long coherence times and the naturally identical atomic qubits. However, one of the main drawbacks is its slow execution rate, dominated by lengthy classical processing tasks, such as fluorescence imaging, cooling, and atom rearrangement. We address this bottleneck with AtomFlow, a field-...
Wooyeong Song, Sungyeon Kook, Wonhyuk Lee, IlKwon Sohn • Published: 2026-07-13
Distributed quantum computation needs to move logical qubits across lossy optical links, yet this transmission layer is usually designed separately from the computation it serves. We treat the two together by recognizing that a measurement-based quantum repeater is a two-dimensional code foliated along the transmission axis, so that the dominant channel loss is concentrated on the transmitted sect...
Jun Inoue • Published: 2026-07-13
We present a quantum process calculus that can split the system state along process boundaries and follow the evolution of each process in isolation, without losing information about the joint state-a property we call spatial compositionality. Compositionality is the key to reasoning about any complex system, yet quantum process calculi have struggled to provide its spatial kind, which would enabl...
Timothy Stroschein, Davide Castaldo, Markus Reiher • Published: 2025-07-20
Accurately solving the Schrödinger equation remains a central challenge in computational physics, chemistry, and materials science. Here, we propose an alternative eigenvalue problem based on a system's autocorrelation function, avoiding direct reference to a wave function. In particular, we develop a rigorous approximation framework that enables precise frequency estimation from a finite number o...
Hugo Catala, Ezequiel Valero, German Rodrigo • Published: 2026-01-26
The simulation of strongly correlated fermionic systems remains a significant challenge in computational physics due to the exponential growth of the Hilbert space and the fermionic sign problem. In this work, we report a quantum computing demonstration exploring the unified physics of the Fermi polaron and the Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) to Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) crossover. We develop...
Reuben Demirdjian, Yvan Quinn, Vincent P. Su, Hrant Gharibyan, Hayk Tepanyan • Published: 2026-07-09
Efficiently solving nonlinear ordinary and partial differential equations using a quantum computer is a major challenge due its inherent linearity. To circumvent this challenge, the Carleman linearization method has been proposed to transform a nonlinear ordinary differential equation into a linear system of equations, the primary advantage being that existing quantum linear systems algorithms may...
Raul Conchello Vendrell, Carlos Díaz López, Ish Dhand, Kshitij Kapoor, Davide Laureti, Marcello Massaro, Pranjal Nayak, Ivan Ogloblin, Martin B. Plenio, Shreya Prasanna Kumar, Matteo Santandrea, Varun Seshadri, Antal Száva, Trevor Vincent, Raphael Weber • Published: 2026-07-09
Hardware teams building fault-tolerant quantum computers (FTQCs) must decide which imperfections to suppress, and that decision requires the logical performance of the architecture under the device's actual noise. Hardware noise often departs from the stochastic Pauli models used by scalable stabilizer simulators: superconducting transmons leak out of the computational subspace, neutral atoms scat...
Rylan Malarchick • Published: 2026-05-13
Public access to pulse-level and control-electronics interfaces in commercial quantum computing has bifurcated. This paper proposes a six-axis rubric for measuring control-plane openness, the layer between gate-level circuit specification and physical control electronics, defined operationally so that the same evidence produces the same grade across vendors. The rubric is validated three ways: a b...