English

The Need for Quantitative Resilience Models and Metrics in Classical-Quantum Computing Systems

Quantum Physics 2026-03-10 v1 Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing Emerging Technologies

Abstract

Increasingly deeper integration of HPC resources and QPUs unveils new challenges in computer architecture and engineering. As a consequence, dependability arises again as a concern encompassing resilience, reproducibility and security. The properties of quantum computing systems involve a reinterpretation of these factors in retrodictive, predictive, and prescriptive ways. We state here that resilience must become an \emph{a priori} design constraint rather than an afterthought of HPC-QPU integration. This article describes the need for conceptual and quantitative models to estimate and assess the resilience hybrid classical-quantum computing infrastructure. We suggest how resilience methods in civil engineering can apply at various levels of the classical-quantum computing stack. We also discuss implications of a model of end-user value for the estimation of consequences resulting from the propagation of vulnerabilities from a given level of the stack upwards. Finally, we argue in favor of new resilience models can help the impact of improving specific components in quantum technology stacks to provide a clearer picture about the value of separation of concerns across different layers. Ultimately, HPC-QPU integration will increasingly demand more precise statements about the cost-benefit ratio of specific system improvements and their cascading consequences against estimates of delivered value to users.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2603.06709,
  title  = {The Need for Quantitative Resilience Models and Metrics in Classical-Quantum Computing Systems},
  author = {Santiago Núñez-Corrales},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.06709},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

16 pages, 8 figures

R2 v1 2026-07-01T11:07:42.982Z