Towards Exploring the Potential of Alternative Quantum Computing Architectures
Arighna Deb1, Gerhard W. Dueck2 and Robert Wille3
1School of Electronics Engineering, KIIT University, India
airghna.debfet@kiit.ac.in
2Faculty of Computer Science, University of New Brunswick, Canada
gdueck@unb.ca
3Institute for Integrated Circuits, Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria
robert.wille@jku.at
ABSTRACT
The recent advances in the physical realization of Noisy Intermediate Scale Quantum (NISQ) computers have motivated research on design automation that allows users to execute quantum algorithms on them. Certain physical constraints in the architectures restrict how logical qubits used to describe the algorithm can be mapped to physical qubits used to realize the corresponding functionality. Thus far, this has been addressed by inserting additional operations in order to overcome the physical constrains. However, all these approaches have taken the existing architectures as invariant and did not explore the potential of changing the quantum architecture itself–a valid option as long as the underlying physical constrains remain satisfied. In this work, we propose initial ideas to explore this potential. More precisely, we introduce several schemes for the generation of alternative coupling graphs (and, by this, quantum computing architectures) that still might be able to satisfy physical constraints but, at the same time, allow for a more efficient realization of the desired quantum functionality.