DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Quantum Machines launches Qualibrate open source framework to speed quantum computer calibration

May 19, 2025
in News
Quantum Machines launches Qualibrate open source framework to speed quantum computer calibration
493
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Quantum Machines, a provider of advanced hybrid quantum-classical control solutions, announced today the release of Qualibrate (which the company spells QUAlibrate), an open-source framework for calibrating quantum computers. It cuts quantum computer calibration time from hours to minutes.

By addressing one of quantum computing’s most critical scaling bottlenecks, Quantum Machines‘ new framework enables fast, modular calibration and fosters a global ecosystem for sharing and advancing calibration protocols

The framework dramatically shortens calibration times and provides a comprehensive solution for creating, executing, and sharing calibration protocols across different quantum computing platforms. By creating an open ecosystem, Qualibrate enables researchers and companies worldwide to build upon each other’s advances, accelerating the path to practical quantum computers.

To properly initialize and maintain a quantum computer’s performance, calibration must be performed not just once, but frequently during operation to compensate for system drift.

As quantum systems grow in size, the calibration challenge becomes exponentially more complex. For instance, calibrating a 100-qubit superconducting quantum computer from scratch can take up to two days, and even recalibrating an already-calibrated system can take an hour or more. This becomes impractical when scaling to future systems with hundreds of thousands of qubits.

“We care both about how long it takes to calibrate and about how good the calibration is, two things that sometimes collide, and this impacts the performance of the quantum computer as a whole,” said Yonatan Cohen, CTO of Quantum Machines, in a statement. “We built an open-source solution because we believe this is a challenge the community can solve together. Researchers in both academia and industry continuously develop new calibration algorithms and protocols. One day, a team in Boston might develop a protocol that increases quantum operation fidelity, the next day a European company might create a method to speed up calibrations. The path to solving this fundamental challenge lies in a collaborative approach where teams can instantly leverage each other’s advances and build on them.”

To address this fundamental challenge, Quantum Machines has developed Qualibrate, an open-source calibration framework that transforms quantum calibration from a collection of isolated scripts into a modular, collaborative system. Qualibrate enables researchers and quantum engineers to create reusable calibration components, combine them into complex workflows, and execute calibrations through an intuitive interface. The platform abstracts away hardware complexities, allowing teams to focus on quantum system logic rather than low-level details.

“Qualibrate has been transformative for our company,” said John Martinis, CTO of Qolab, in a statement. “Its automated calibration capabilities now complete full calibrations in less than 10 minutes – tasks that otherwise would demand up to two hours of manual work. This efficiency boost frees up our team to focus on accelerating our QPU development.”

In a recent demonstration at the Israeli Quantum Computing Center (IQCC), Qualibrate completed a multi-qubit calibration of superconducting qubits in just 140 seconds. The result demonstrates the system’s speed and efficiency in real-world conditions.

Qualibrate’s open-source nature and modular architecture mean that when researchers develop new calibration protocols, these innovations can be immediately shared, validated, and built upon by the broader quantum computing community.

Companies can also develop proprietary solutions on top of Qualibrate that leverage advanced approaches like quantum system simulation and deep learning algorithms. This creates an ecosystem where fundamental calibration advances can be shared openly and enables specialized tools that push the boundaries of performance.

Along with the framework, Quantum Machines is releasing its first calibration graph for superconducting quantum computers, providing a complete calibration solution that can be immediately deployed and customized.

The graph leverages Qualibrate’s parallel calibration capabilities to dramatically reduce calibration times. Looking ahead, Quantum Machines and Nvidia are developing software libraries that will integrate Qualibrate with accelerators like the Nvidia DGX Quantum, enabling even faster calibration times and higher fidelity calibrations using machine learning models.

Quantum Machines was founded in early 2018 by Itamar Sivan (CEO), Yonatan Cohen (CTO), and Nissim Ofek (chief engineer). All are physics PhDs with expertise in quantum computing and quantum electronics. 

Since its founding, the company has raised $280 million from leading funds, including PSG Equity, Red Dot Capital Partners, Intel Capital, TLV Partners, and Battery Ventures. The company employs around 170 people, half based in Israel, with the rest in Europe, the U.S., and other countries.

Quantum computing researchers and engineers can begin using QUAlibrate today by accessing the open source repository at: https://github.com/qua-platform/qualibrate.

The post Quantum Machines launches Qualibrate open source framework to speed quantum computer calibration appeared first on Venture Beat.

Share197Tweet123Share
’28 Years Later’ actor Chi Lewis-Parry said he scared Danny Boyle into casting him as Samson the Alpha
News

’28 Years Later’ actor Chi Lewis-Parry said he scared Danny Boyle into casting him as Samson the Alpha

by Business Insider
July 1, 2025

Chi Lewis-Parry at the "28 Years Later" premiere and in an exclusive behind-the-scenes photo from the film.John Phillips/Getty Images/Chi Lewis-Parry/SonyWhen ...

Read more
News

Poland will temporarily reinstate border controls with Germany and Lithuania

July 1, 2025
News

Explosion at Indian Pharmaceutical Factory Kills 36

July 1, 2025
News

‘The Sandman’ is based on one of the best-loved comics of all time. So why did Netflix cancel it after 2 seasons?

July 1, 2025
News

Pokémon Go ‘9th Anniversary Party’ event guide

July 1, 2025
Lululemon sues Costco over selling alleged dupes

Lululemon sues Costco over selling alleged dupes

July 1, 2025
NEON Boards Chloe Domont’s Thriller ‘A Place In Hell’ Starring Michelle Williams, Daisy Edgar Jones & Andrew Scott

NEON Boards Chloe Domont’s Thriller ‘A Place In Hell’ Starring Michelle Williams, Daisy Edgar Jones & Andrew Scott

July 1, 2025
Our family booked a dreamy beach vacation to Bora Bora. We were so disappointed that we flew somewhere else after 3 days.

Our family booked a dreamy beach vacation to Bora Bora. We were so disappointed that we flew somewhere else after 3 days.

July 1, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.