Extending the Q-Score to an Application-Level Quantum Metric Framework

Conference Paper (2025)
Author(s)

Ward van der Schoot (TNO)

Robert Wezeman (TNO)

Niels Neumann (TNO)

Frank Phillipson (TNO, Universiteit Maastricht)

R.E. Kooij (TNO, TU Delft - Quantum & Computer Engineering)

Department
Quantum & Computer Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/QCE60285.2024.00113
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Department
Quantum & Computer Engineering
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public. @en
Pages (from-to)
941-951
ISBN (electronic)
9798331541378
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Abstract

Evaluating the performance of quantum devices is an important step towards scaling quantum devices and eventually using them in practice. The great number of available quantum metrics and the different hardware technologies used to develop quantum computers complicate this evaluation. In addition, different computational paradigms implement quantum operations in different ways. A prominent quantum metric is given by the Q-score metric of Atos. This metric was originally introduced as a standalone way to benchmark devices using the Max-Cut problem. In this work, we show that the Q-score defines a framework of quantum metrics, which allows benchmarking using different problems, user settings and solvers. To showcase the applicability of the framework, we showcase a second Q-score in this framework, called the Q-score Max-Clique. This yields, to our knowledge, the first application-level metric capable of natively comparing three different paradigms of quantum computing. This metric is evaluated on these computational quantum paradigms - quantum annealing, gate-based quantum computing, and photonic quantum computing - and the results are compared to those obtained by classical solvers.

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