Satvik Maurya

h-index16
2papers

2 Papers

4.7QUANT-PHMar 11
Managing Classical Processing Requirements for Quantum Error Correction

Satvik Maurya, Abtin Molavi, Aws Albarghouthi et al.

Large-scale quantum computers promise transformative speedups, but their viability hinges on fast and reliable quantum error correction (QEC). At the center of QEC are decoders-classical algorithms running on hardware such as FPGAs, GPUs, or CPUs that process error syndromes to detect errors every microsecond to preserve fault-tolerance. Quantum processors, therefore, operate not in isolation, but as accelerators tightly coupled with powerful classical digital hardware. A key challenge is that decoder demand fluctuates unpredictably: bursts of activity can require orders of magnitude more decodes than idle periods. Provisioning hardware for the worst case wastes resources, while provisioning for the average case risks catastrophic slowdowns. We show that this mismatch is a systems problem of capacity planning and scheduling, and propose a two-level framework that treats decoders as shared accelerators managed by the quantum operating system. Our approach reduces decoder requirements by 10-40% across fault-tolerant benchmarks, demonstrating that efficient decoder scheduling is essential to making FTQC practical.

QUANT-PHOct 29, 2025
Enabling Fast and Accurate Neutral Atom Readout through Image Denoising

Chaithanya Naik Mude, Linipun Phuttitarn, Satvik Maurya et al.

Neutral atom quantum computers hold promise for scaling up to hundreds of thousands of qubits, but their progress is constrained by slow qubit readout. Measuring qubits currently takes milliseconds-much longer than the underlying quantum gate operations-making readout the primary bottleneck in deploying quantum error correction. Because each round of QEC depends on measurement, long readout times increase cycle duration and slow down program execution. Reducing the readout duration speeds up cycles and reduces decoherence errors that accumulate while qubits idle, but it also lowers the number of collected photons, making measurements noisier and more error-prone. This tradeoff leaves neutral atom systems stuck between slow but accurate readout and fast but unreliable readout. We show that image denoising can resolve this tension. Our framework, GANDALF, uses explicit denoising using image translation to reconstruct clear signals from short, low-photon measurements, enabling reliable classification at up to 1.6x shorter readout times. Combined with lightweight classifiers and a pipelined readout design, our approach both reduces logical error rate by up to 35x and overall QEC cycle time up to 1.77x compared to state-of-the-art CNN-based readout for Cesium (Cs) Neutral Atom arrays.