English

TensorQC: Towards Scalable Distributed Quantum Computing via Tensor Networks

Emerging Technologies 2025-02-06 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

A quantum processing unit (QPU) must contain a large number of high quality qubits to produce accurate results for problems at useful scales. In contrast, most scientific and industry classical computation workloads happen in parallel on distributed systems, which rely on copying data across multiple cores. Unfortunately, copying quantum data is theoretically prohibited due to the quantum non-cloning theory. Instead, quantum circuit cutting techniques cut a large quantum circuit into multiple smaller subcircuits, distribute the subcircuits on parallel QPUs and reconstruct the results with classical computing. Such techniques make distributed hybrid quantum computing (DHQC) a possibility but also introduce an exponential classical co-processing cost in the number of cuts and easily become intractable. This paper presents TensorQC, which leverages classical tensor networks to bring an exponential runtime advantage over state-of-the-art parallelization post-processing techniques. As a result, this paper demonstrates running benchmarks that are otherwise intractable for a standalone QPU and prior circuit cutting techniques. Specifically, this paper runs six realistic benchmarks using QPUs available nowadays and a single GPU, and reduces the QPU size and quality requirements by more than 10×10\times over purely quantum platforms.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2502.03445,
  title  = {TensorQC: Towards Scalable Distributed Quantum Computing via Tensor Networks},
  author = {Wei Tang and Margaret Martonosi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.03445},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

14 pages, 14 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T21:33:51.303Z