Zohim Chandani

h-index62
2papers

2 Papers

71.8QUANT-PHMar 16
Photonic Quantum-Enhanced Knowledge Distillation

Kuan-Cheng Chen, Shang Yu, Chen-Yu Liu et al.

Photonic quantum processors naturally produce intrinsically stochastic measurement outcomes, offering a hardware-native source of structured randomness that can be exploited during machine-learning training. Here we introduce Photonic Quantum-Enhanced Knowledge Distillation (PQKD), a hybrid quantum photonic--classical framework in which a programmable photonic circuit generates a compact conditioning signal that constrains and guides a parameter-efficient student network during distillation from a high-capacity teacher. PQKD replaces fully trainable convolutional kernels with dictionary convolutions: each layer learns only a small set of shared spatial basis filters, while sample-dependent channel-mixing weights are derived from shot-limited photonic features and mapped through a fixed linear transform. Training alternates between standard gradient-based optimisation of the student and sampling-robust, gradient-free updates of photonic parameters, avoiding differentiation through photonic hardware. Across MNIST, Fashion-MNIST and CIFAR-10, PQKD traces a controllable compression--accuracy frontier, remaining close to teacher performance on simpler benchmarks under aggressive convolutional compression. Performance degrades predictably with finite sampling, consistent with shot-noise scaling, and exponential moving-average feature smoothing suppresses high-frequency shot-noise fluctuations, extending the practical operating regime at moderate shot budgets.

QUANT-PHJun 2, 2025
Synthesis of discrete-continuous quantum circuits with multimodal diffusion models

Florian Fürrutter, Zohim Chandani, Ikko Hamamura et al.

Efficiently compiling quantum operations remains a major bottleneck in scaling quantum computing. Today's state-of-the-art methods achieve low compilation error by combining search algorithms with gradient-based parameter optimization, but they incur long runtimes and require multiple calls to quantum hardware or expensive classical simulations, making their scaling prohibitive. Recently, machine-learning models have emerged as an alternative, though they are currently restricted to discrete gate sets. Here, we introduce a multimodal denoising diffusion model that simultaneously generates a circuit's structure and its continuous parameters for compiling a target unitary. It leverages two independent diffusion processes, one for discrete gate selection and one for parameter prediction. We benchmark the model over different experiments, analyzing the method's accuracy across varying qubit counts, circuit depths, and proportions of parameterized gates. Finally, by exploiting its rapid circuit generation, we create large datasets of circuits for particular operations and use these to extract valuable heuristics that can help us discover new insights into quantum circuit synthesis.