Quantum computing is one of the most enticing computational paradigms with the potential to revolutionize diverse areas of
future-generation computational systems. While quantum computing hardware has advanced rapidly, from tiny laboratory experiments to quantum chips that can outperform even the largest supercomputers on specialized computational tasks, these noisyintermediate scale quantum (NISQ) processors are still too small and non-robust to be directly useful for any real-world applications.
In this paper, we describe NASA’s work in assessing and advancing the potential of quantum computing. We discuss advances in
algorithms, both near- and longer-term, and the results of our explorations on current hardware as well as with simulations, including illustrating the benefits of algorithm-hardware co-design in the NISQ era. This work also includes physics-inspired classical
algorithms that can be used at application scale today. We discuss innovative tools supporting the assessment and advancement of
quantum computing and describe improved methods for simulating quantum systems of various types on high-performance computing systems that incorporate realistic error models. We provide an overview of recent methods for benchmarking, evaluating, and
characterizing quantum hardware for error mitigation, as well as insights into fundamental quantum physics that can be harnessed
for computational purposes.
Article: https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.15601