Date
Thu, 31 Oct 2024
Time
14:00 - 15:00
Location
Lecture Room 3
Speaker
Balint Koczor
Organisation
Oxford University

Quantum computers are becoming a reality and current generations of machines are already well beyond the 50-qubit frontier. However, hardware imperfections still overwhelm these devices and it is generally believed the fault-tolerant, error-corrected systems will not be within reach in the near term: a single logical qubit needs to be encoded into potentially thousands of physical qubits which is prohibitive.

 

Due to limited resources, in the near term, hybrid quantum-classical protocols are the most promising candidates for achieving early quantum advantage and these need to resort to quantum error mitigation techniques. I will explain the basic concepts and introduce hybrid quantum-classical protocols are the most promising candidates for achieving early quantum advantage. These have the potential to solve real-world problems---including optimisation or ground-state search---but they suffer from a large number of circuit repetitions required to extract information from the quantum state. I will finally identify the most likely areas where quantum computers may deliver a true advantage in the near term.

 

Bálint Koczor

Associate Professor in Quantum Information Theory

Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford

webpage

Last updated on 24 Sep 2024, 8:28am. Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page.