Toward Covert Quantum Computing

arXiv:2605.143257.8
Predicted impact top 89% in QUANT-PH · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses privacy for multi-tenant quantum cloud platforms, but the discovered side channel is a significant practical limitation.

The paper introduces covert quantum computing, ensuring an adversary with access to all other quantum computational units cannot detect computation on a subset they cannot access. Using discrete isoperimetric inequalities, they show only O(√n) border qubits provide detection information, but experiments on IQM's 54-qubit and IBM's 156-qubit processors reveal long-range crosstalk beyond border qubits, creating a side channel that weakens covertness.

As quantum computers become available through multi-tenant cloud platforms, ensuring privacy against adversaries sharing the same quantum processing unit becomes critical. We introduce and explore \emph{covert quantum computing}, a new concept that ensures an adversary with access to all other quantum computational units (QCUs) of a quantum computer cannot detect computation on the subset that they cannot access. Analogous to covert communication, we employ information theory. However, since here the adversary controls the systems used for detection, we require a richer framework for covertness analysis that accounts for the use of quantum memories and adaptive operations. Thus, we adopt the \emph{quantum-strategy} framework used in quantum game theory and memory channel discrimination. Current quantum computers use planar graph circuit layouts and typically assume nearest-neighbor crosstalk. We derive discrete isoperimetric inequalities to show that, for an $n$-qubit circuit under this model, only $\mathcal{O}(\sqrt{n})$ border qubits provide detection information to the adversary. We then explore this scaling law on IQM's 54-qubit \emph{Emerald} processor and IBM's 156-qubit \emph{ibm\_fez} machine employing the Heron 2 architecture. We implement Ramsey experiments on qubits not used in computation, and detect nearest-neighbor crosstalk, as expected. However, we also observe long-range coupling effects beyond the border qubits, revealing a side channel that the adversary can exploit. We hypothesize that this long-range crosstalk is induced by leakage from the drive and control lines. Beyond weakening covertness, it exposes co-tenants to both adversarial and unintended crosstalk and degrades circuits that span spatially distributed qubits, motivating further work on spatial isolation and crosstalk characterization.

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