Non-local communication overhead in circuits mapped to cluster-based  machines. Our new mapping scheme FGP-rOEE (Fine Grained Partitioning,  with relaxed Overall Extreme Exchange partitioner) provides reduces the  number of operations added for non-…

Non-local communication overhead in circuits mapped to cluster-based machines. Our new mapping scheme FGP-rOEE (Fine Grained Partitioning, with relaxed Overall Extreme Exchange partitioner) provides reduces the number of operations added for non-local communication on benchmarks.

Current quantum computer designs will not scale. To scale beyond small prototypes, quantum architectures will likely adopt a modular approach with clusters of tightly connected quantum bits and sparser connections between clusters. We exploit this clustering and the statically-known control flow of quantum programs to create tractable partitioning heuristics which map quantum circuits to modular physical machines one time slice at a time. Specifically, we create optimized mappings for each time slice, accounting for the cost to move data from the previous time slice and using a tunable lookahead scheme to reduce the cost to move to future time slices. We compare our approach to a traditional statically-mapped, owner-computes model. Our results show strict improvement over the static mapping baseline. We reduce the non-local communication overhead by 89.8% in the best case and by 60.9% on average. Our techniques, unlike many exact solver methods, are computationally tractable.

Baker, Jonathan M; Duckering, Casey; Hoover, Alexander; Chong, Frederic T