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  2. Qiskit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QISKit

    Qiskit is made of elements that work together to enable quantum computing. The central goal of Qiskit is to build a software stack that makes it easier for anyone to use quantum computers, regardless of their skill level or area of interest; Qiskit allows users to design experiments and applications and run them on real quantum computers and/or classical simulators.

  3. Quantum simulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_simulator

    Credit: Britton/NIST Trapped ion quantum simulator illustration: The heart of the simulator is a two-dimensional crystal of beryllium ions (blue spheres in the graphic); the outermost electron of each ion is a quantum bit (qubit, red arrows). The ions are confined by a large magnetic field in a device called a Penning trap (not shown).

  4. IBM Quantum Platform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_Quantum_Platform

    The service was launched in May 2016 as the IBM Quantum Experience [1] with a five-qubit quantum processor and matching simulator connected in a star shaped pattern. At this time, users could only interact with the hardware through the quantum composer GUI. Quantum circuits were also limited to the specific two-qubit gates available on the ...

  5. List of quantum chemistry and solid-state physics software

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_quantum_chemistry...

    Quantum chemistry computer programs are used in computational chemistry to implement the methods of quantum chemistry. Most include the Hartree–Fock (HF) and some post-Hartree–Fock methods. They may also include density functional theory (DFT), molecular mechanics or semi-empirical quantum chemistry methods.

  6. Quantum computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_computing

    Complex numbers model probability amplitudes, vectors model quantum states, and matrices model the operations that can be performed on these states. Programming a quantum computer is then a matter of composing operations in such a way that the resulting program computes a useful result in theory and is implementable in practice.

  7. Cirq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cirq

    Cirq was developed by the Google AI Quantum Team, and the public alpha was announced at the International Workshop on Quantum Software and Quantum Machine Learning on July 18, 2018. [2] A demo by QC Ware showed an implementation of QAOA solving an example of the maximum cut problem being solved on a Cirq simulator.

  8. Cloud-based quantum computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud-based_quantum_computing

    Quantum in the Cloud by The University of Bristol, which consists of a quantum simulator and a four qubit optical quantum system. [19] Quantum Playground by Google, which features a simulator with a simple interface, and a scripting language and 3D quantum state visualization. [20] Quantum in the Cloud by Tsinghua University.

  9. Quantum Turing machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_Turing_machine

    A quantum Turing machine (QTM) or universal quantum computer is an abstract machine used to model the effects of a quantum computer. It provides a simple model that captures all of the power of quantum computation—that is, any quantum algorithm can be expressed formally as a particular quantum Turing machine.