The development of fault-tolerant quantum computers (FTQCs) is gaining increased attention
within the quantum computing community. Like their digital counterparts, FTQCs, equipped with
error correction and large qubit numbers, promise to solve some of humanity’s grand challenges.
Estimates of the resource requirements for future FTQC systems are essential to making design
choices and prioritizing R&D efforts to develop critical technologies. Here, we present a resource
estimation framework and software tool that estimates the physical resources required to execute
specific quantum algorithms, compiled into their graph-state form, and laid out onto a modular
superconducting hardware architecture. This tool can predict the size, power consumption, and
execution time of these algorithms at as they approach utility-scale according to explicit assumptions
about the system’s physical layout, thermal load, and modular connectivity. We use this tool to
study the total resources on a proposed modular architecture and the impact of tradeoffs between
and inter-module connectivity, latency and resource requirements.
Article: https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.06015