IonQ, a quantum computing startup, outlined a roadmap where it will be able to network smaller quantum systems together as it introduced a new metric, Algorithmic Qubits.
For IonQ, the typical Quantum Volume metrics, introduced by IBM, isn’t going to cut it in the long run. IonQ’s take is that quantum volume as a metric will be unusable soon as quantum computers will have numbers too large to fit on a screen.
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In a blog post, IonQ CEO Peter Chapman said using Quantum Volume as a metric is like buying processors based on the number of transistors. Samsung’s Catalyst Fund is an investor in IonQ.
He said:
We introduce Algorithmic Qubits (AQ), which is defined as the largest number of effectively perfect qubits you can deploy for a typical quantum program. It’s a similar idea to Quantum Volume but takes error-correction into account and has a clear, direct relationship to qubit count. In the absence of error-correction encoding, AQ = log2(QV), or inversely, QV = 2AQ. AQ represents the number of “useful” encoded qubits in a particular quantum computer and is a simple proxy for the ability to execute real quantum algorithms for a given input size.
AQ is generally smaller than the number of physical qubits. Hence, ignore vendors (and by extension, their roadmaps) that describe their systems purely by the number of physical qubits. A 72 qubit chip and a million qubit chip with 95% fidelity gates both have a QV of 8 and an AQ of 3. With that fidelity, only three qubits can be used for calculation, no matter the number of physical qubits.
The general theme from IonQ is that a focus on quality of quantum logic gate operations will make the systems more scalable and mainstream. It will be interesting to see how other vendors react to AQ, but the squabbles over metrics highlight how the industry is in its infancy. Honeywell recently outlined its quantum systems and there are a bevy of players including Google, IBM and its System Q, Microsoft, Intel, AWS and others chasing commercialization in some form.
For instance, IBM’s quantum computing roadmap plots a 1,121-qubit system in 2023. Based on AQ, that system would be 65.
IonQ said it will deploy modular quantum computers small enough to be networked together in a data center. By 2025, Chapman said IonQ will reach broad quantum advantage.
Using AQ, IonQ said that its recently released 32 qubit system with 99.9% fidelity already features 22 Algorithmic Qubits. Here’s the IonQ roadmap based on AQ.