A full-system energy model shows NISQ quantum simulations dominated by error mitigation sampling overhead while FTQC costs are driven by physical qubit overhead from code distance and magic states.
Characterizing and Benchmarking Dynamic Quantum Circuits
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Dynamic quantum circuits with mid-circuit measurements (MCMs) and feed-forward operations play a crucial role in various applications, such as quantum error correction and quantum algorithms. With advancements in quantum hardware enabling the implementation of MCM and feed-forward loops, the use of dynamic circuits has become increasingly prevalent. There is a significant need for a benchmarking framework specially designed for dynamic circuits to capture their unique properties, as current benchmarking tools are designed primarily for unitary circuits and cannot be trivially extended to dynamic circuits. We propose dynamarq, a scalable and hardware-agnostic benchmarking framework for dynamic circuits. We collect a set of dynamic circuit benchmarks spanning various applications and propose a broad set of circuit features to characterize the structure of these dynamic circuits. We run them on two IBM quantum processors and the Quantinuum Helios-1E emulator, and propose scalable, application-dependent fidelity scores for each benchmark based on hardware execution results. We perform statistical modeling to identify correlations between circuit features and fidelity scores, and demonstrate highly accurate fidelity prediction using our model. Our model parameters are also transferable across hardware backends and calibration cycles. Our framework facilitates the understanding of dynamic circuit structures and provides insights for designing and optimizing dynamic circuits to achieve high execution fidelity on quantum hardware.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
fields
quant-ph 3years
2026 3verdicts
UNVERDICTED 3roles
background 1polarities
background 1representative citing papers
Combining dynamical decoupling and zero-noise extrapolation on real quantum hardware improves energy gap estimates by at least 60% and reduces time-evolution errors by up to 99% for the Ising model in dynamic circuit Hamiltonian simulations.
A technology-dependent conceptual design for ternary quantum gates including Chrestenson, Z3 variants, controlled gates, a non-phase SWAP, and a GF(3)-based Toffoli for qutrit systems.
citing papers explorer
-
Estimating The Energy Consumption of Quantum Computing from A Full System Aspect
A full-system energy model shows NISQ quantum simulations dominated by error mitigation sampling overhead while FTQC costs are driven by physical qubit overhead from code distance and magic states.
-
Error Mitigation in Dynamic Circuits for Hamiltonian Simulation
Combining dynamical decoupling and zero-noise extrapolation on real quantum hardware improves energy gap estimates by at least 60% and reduces time-evolution errors by up to 99% for the Ising model in dynamic circuit Hamiltonian simulations.
-
A Conceptual Technology-Dependent Framework of Ternary Quantum Gates
A technology-dependent conceptual design for ternary quantum gates including Chrestenson, Z3 variants, controlled gates, a non-phase SWAP, and a GF(3)-based Toffoli for qutrit systems.