1. Efficient Qubit Routing for a Globally Connected Trapped Ion Quantum Computer
- Author
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Steven Herbert, Sebastian Weidt, Winfried K. Hensinger, and Mark Webber
- Subjects
Superconductivity ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Quantum Physics ,Computer science ,Routing algorithm ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Topology ,01 natural sciences ,Upper and lower bounds ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Qubit ,0103 physical sciences ,Lower cost ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,010306 general physics ,Quantum Physics (quant-ph) ,Quantum ,Mathematical Physics ,Trapped ion quantum computer ,Quantum computer - Abstract
The cost of enabling connectivity in Noisy-Intermediate-Scale-Quantum devices is an important factor in determining computational power. We have created a qubit routing algorithm which enables efficient global connectivity in a previously proposed trapped ion quantum computing architecture. The routing algorithm was characterized by comparison against both a strict lower bound, and a positional swap based routing algorithm. We propose an error model which can be used to estimate the achievable circuit depth and quantum volume of the device as a function of experimental parameters. We use a new metric based on quantum volume, but with native two qubit gates, to assess the cost of connectivity relative to the upper bound of free, all to all connectivity. The metric was also used to assess a square grid superconducting device. We compare these two architectures and find that for the shuttling parameters used, the trapped ion design has a substantially lower cost associated with connectivity., Comment: 12 pages
- Published
- 2020
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