Prithviraj Prabhu • Published: 2026-05-12
Quantum computation holds the promise of solving certain complex problems exponentially faster than classical computers. However, the high prevalent noise in current quantum devices impedes the accurate execution of even basic algorithms. This can be remedied by protecting quantum information with a quantum error-correcting code, where the logical information of an algorithmic qubit is spread acro...
Dario Picozzi, Jonathan Tennyson, Vincent Graves, Jimena D. Gorfinkiel • Published: 2025-07-07
Electron-molecule collisions play a central role in both natural processes and modern technological applications, particularly in plasma processing. Conventional computational strategies such as the R-matrix method have been widely adopted yet encounter significant scaling challenges in treating more complex systems. In this work we present a quantum computational approach that utilises the variat...
Siyuan Niu, Di Wu, Ozgur Ozan Kilic, Kwangmin Yu • Published: 2026-05-10
Quantum computing promises disruptive capabilities, yet its energy footprint has received far less attention than its asymptotic speedups. We present a first-order, full-system energy model for quantum computing in an high performance computing (HPC) context. The model separates costs common to NISQ and FTQC, such as system maintenance and classical processing, from regime-specific ones such as er...
Kisho Sotokawa, Hideaki Kawaguchi, Shin Nishio, Takahiko Satoh • Published: 2026-05-12
Running a quantum circuit on current hardware involves a sequence of engineering decisions, each with tunable parameters and distinct error characteristics. Existing tools optimize each decision in isolation, leaving practitioners unable to determine how much each decision contributes to final output quality. We present QuBridge, a pipeline analysis tool that decomposes quantum computation into th...
Brendan K. Krueger, Stephan Eidenbenz, Shamminuj Aktar, Rishabh Bhardwaj, John K. Golden, George Grattan, Abhijith Jayakumar, Anna Matsekh, Scott Pakin, Nandakishore Santhi, Reuben Tate • Published: 2026-05-11
We present the Quantum Hamiltonian Analysis Toolkit (QHAT), a newly developed application that provides a user-friendly interface for studying Hamiltonians and performing Hamiltonian simulation on fault-tolerant quantum computers. QHAT enables the generation and analysis of Hamiltonians through a powerful and feature-rich application, driven by simple inputs designed to reflect user needs rather t...
Evan Sutcliffe, Coral M. Westoby • Published: 2026-05-11
It is desirable that a distributed quantum computer can operate despite the replacement or failure of its constituent components, allowing the reliability of the distributed system to exceed that of its subcomponents. We first show that when quantum error correction is performed over a modular quantum network, quantum devices can be swapped out or replaced, during operation, with minimal impact on...
G. Q. Garcia, M. Dantas, A. Carvalho, C. Furtado • Published: 2025-09-01
We investigate the emergence of geometric phases in graphene-based nanostructures through the lens of the Atiyah-Singer index theorem. By modeling low-energy quasiparticles in curved graphene geometries as Dirac fermions, we demonstrate that topological defects arising from the insertion of pentagonal or heptagonal carbon rings generate effective gauge fields that induce quantized Berry phases. We...
Jacques Garrigue, Takafumi Saikawa • Published: 2023-11-24
We propose a type-theoretic framework for describing and proving properties of quantum computations, in particular those presented as quantum circuits. Our proposal is based on an observation that, in the polymorphic type system of Coq, currying on quantum states allows us to apply quantum gates directly inside a complex circuit. By introducing a discrete notion of lens to control this currying, w...
Adrian Harkness, Hamidreza Validi, Ramin Fakhimi, Illya V. Hicks, Samuel Stein, Tamás Terlaky, Luis F. Zuluaga • Published: 2025-11-02
Quantum computing offers significant potential for solving NP-hard combinatorial (optimization) problems that are beyond the reach of classical computers. One way to tap into this potential is by reformulating combinatorial problems as a quadratic unconstrained binary optimization (QUBO) problem. The solution of the QUBO reformulation can then be addressed using adiabatic quantum computing devices...
Ulysse Chabaud, Michael Joseph, Saeed Mehraban, Arsalan Motamedi • Published: 2024-10-05
Quantum computing involving physical systems with continuous degrees of freedom, such as the quantum states of light, has recently attracted significant interest. However, a well-defined quantum complexity theory for these bosonic computations over infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces is missing. In this work, we lay foundations for such a research program. We introduce natural complexity classes a...