English

QuMod: Parallel Quantum Job Scheduling on Modular QPUs using Circuit Cutting

Quantum Physics 2026-04-14 v1 Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing Emerging Technologies

Abstract

The quantum computing community is increasingly positioning quantum processors as accelerators within classical HPC workflows, analogous to GPUs and TPUs. However, many real-world applications require scaling to hundreds or thousands of physical qubits to realize logical qubits via error correction. To reach these scales, hardware vendors employing diverse technologies -- such as trapped ions, photonics, neutral atoms, and superconducting circuits -- are moving beyond single, monolithic QPUs toward modular architectures connected via interconnects. For example, IonQ has proposed photonic links for scaling, while IBM has demonstrated a modular QPU architecture by classically linking two 127-qubit devices. Using dynamic circuits, Bell-pair-based teleportation, and circuit cutting, they have shown how to execute a large quantum circuit that cannot fit on a single QPU. As interest in quantum computing grows, cloud providers must ensure fair and efficient resource allocation for multiple users sharing such modular systems. Classical interconnection of QPUs introduces new scheduling challenges, particularly when multiple jobs execute in parallel. In this work, we develop a multi-programmable scheduler for modular quantum systems that jointly considers qubit mapping, parallel circuit execution, measurement synchronization across subcircuits, and teleportation operations between QPUs using dynamic circuits.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2604.11013,
  title  = {QuMod: Parallel Quantum Job Scheduling on Modular QPUs using Circuit Cutting},
  author = {Vinooth Kulkarni and Aaron Orenstein and Xinpeng Li and Shuai Xu and Daniel Blankenberg and Vipin Chaudhary},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2604.11013},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

8 Pages, 5 figures, published in QCNC 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T12:05:38.207Z