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Evidence for the utility of quantum computing before fault tolerance

Abhinav Kandala, Manager, Quantum Capabilities and Demonstrations at IBM Quantum

Quantum computers can offer dramatic speed-ups over their classical counterparts for certain problems. However, noise remains the biggest impediment to realizing the full potential of quantum computing. While the theory of quantum error correction offers a solution to this challenge, a large scale realization of fault tolerance seems currently inaccessible. What can one hope to do then, with existing noisy processors? In this talk, I will present experiments that produce reliable expectation values from a noisy 127 qubit processor, at a scale that is well beyond brute-force classical computation. We argue that this represents evidence for the utility of quantum computing in a pre-fault-tolerant era. I will also discuss recent classical benchmarking of our experiments beyond exact verification.





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Date

Mar 27 2024
Expired!

Time

1:30 pm - 2:30 pm
C520 Physics and Astronomy Building

Location

C520 Physics and Astronomy Building
UW, 15th and Pacific, Seattle
Website
https://phys.washington.edu/
Category
Martin Savage

Organizer

Martin Savage
Phone
+1 (206) 543-7481
Email
mjs5@uw.edu
Website
https://www.int.washington.edu/users/mjs5/