Litcius/Paper detail

Establishing the quantum supremacy frontier with a 281 Pflop/s simulation

Benjamin Villalonga, Dmitry Lyakh, Sergio Boixo, Hartmut Neven, Travis S Humble, Rupak Biswas, Eleanor G Rieffel, Alan Ho, Salvatore Mandrà

2020Quantum Science and Technology121 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) computers are entering an era in which they can perform computational tasks beyond the capabilities of the most powerful classical computers, thereby achieving ‘quantum supremacy’, a major milestone in quantum computing. NISQ supremacy requires comparison with a state-of-the-art classical simulator. We report HPC simulations of hard random quantum circuits (RQC), which have been recently used as a benchmark for the first experimental demonstration of quantum supremacy, sustaining an average performance of 281 Pflop/s (true single precision) on Summit, currently the fastest supercomputer in the world. These simulations were carried out using qFlex, a tensor-network-based classical high-performance simulator of RQCs. Our results show an advantage of many orders of magnitude in energy consumption of NISQ devices over classical supercomputers. In addition, we propose a standard benchmark for NISQ computers based on qFlex.

Topics & Concepts

Benchmark (surveying)Computer scienceMilestoneQuantum computerQuantumSupercomputerComputational scienceQuantum algorithmLimit (mathematics)FLOPSParallel computingOverhead (engineering)Computer engineeringSoftwareBlack boxQuantum simulatorEnergy consumptionScale (ratio)Quantum circuitEnergy (signal processing)Quantum Computing Algorithms and ArchitectureQuantum many-body systemsQuantum-Dot Cellular Automata