MIRAGE: Quantum Circuit Decomposition and Routing Collaborative Design using Mirror Gates
Abstract
Building efficient large-scale quantum computers is a significant challenge due to limited qubit connectivities and noisy hardware operations. Transpilation is critical to ensure that quantum gates are on physically linked qubits, while minimizing gates and simultaneously finding efficient decomposition into native . The goal of this multifaceted optimization step is typically to minimize circuit depth and to achieve the best possible execution fidelity. In this work, we propose , a collaborative design and transpilation approach to minimize gates while improving decomposition using . Mirror gates utilize the same underlying physical interactions, but when their outputs are reversed, they realize a different or quantum operation. Given the recent attention to as a powerful basis gate with decomposition advantages over , we show how systems that implement the family of gates can benefit from mirror gates. Further, uses mirror gates to reduce routing pressure and reduce true circuit depth instead of just minimizing s. We explore the benefits of decomposition for and using mirror gates, including both expanding Haar coverage and conducting a detailed fault rate analysis trading off circuit depth against approximate gate decomposition. We also describe a novel greedy approach accepting mirror substitution at different aggression levels within MIRAGE. Finally, for systems that use square-lattice topologies, provides an average of 29.6% reduction in circuit depth by eliminating an average of 59.9f% gates, which ultimately improves the practical applicability of our algorithm.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2308.03874,
title = {MIRAGE: Quantum Circuit Decomposition and Routing Collaborative Design using Mirror Gates},
author = {Evan McKinney and Michael Hatridge and Alex K. Jones},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2308.03874},
year = {2025}
}
Comments
13 pages, 13 figures. This paper is under review for the IEEE and/or ACM