ExplorerQuantum ComputingQuantum Physics
Research PaperResearchia:202604.29073

MCMit: Mid-Circuit Measurement Error Mitigation

Emmanouil Giortamis

Abstract

Distributed Quantum Computing (DQC) and Quantum Error Correction (QEC) rely on dynamic circuits that include Mid-Circuit Measurements (MCMs) and classical feedback. These operations present a major bottleneck: MCMs suffer from high error rates that lead to real-time branching errors, while MCM and classical feedback latencies amplify decoherence errors. Current hardware controllers, qubit-state discriminators, and software error mitigation techniques fail to address these challenges holistically...

Submitted: April 29, 2026Subjects: Quantum Physics; Quantum Computing

Description / Details

Distributed Quantum Computing (DQC) and Quantum Error Correction (QEC) rely on dynamic circuits that include Mid-Circuit Measurements (MCMs) and classical feedback. These operations present a major bottleneck: MCMs suffer from high error rates that lead to real-time branching errors, while MCM and classical feedback latencies amplify decoherence errors. Current hardware controllers, qubit-state discriminators, and software error mitigation techniques fail to address these challenges holistically. We propose MCMit, a hardware-software co-design to mitigate branching and latency-induced errors. MCMit introduces a scalable, constant-latency multi-control branch instruction for faster classical feedback and two qubit-state discriminators, a transformer, and a CNN, with high accuracy even under short measurement durations. On the software side, static MCM elimination and stochastic branching complement the hardware by mitigating residual branching errors that persist despite hardware improvements. We implement MCMit on Qubic and evaluate it using experimentally extracted QPU readout traces. Our branch instruction reduces feedback latency by up to 70%, improving circuit depths by up to 7×7\times over Qubic. Our CNN discriminator achieves 37-73% higher accuracy for short measurement durations than the baselines, leading to up to 80% lower logical error rates in QEC. Last, our software mitigation improves fidelity by 18--30% over baseline methods.


Source: arXiv:2604.25863v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.25863v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.25863v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.25863v1

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!

Access Paper
View Source PDF
Submission Info
Date:
Apr 29, 2026
Topic:
Quantum Computing
Area:
Quantum Physics
Comments:
0
Bookmark
MCMit: Mid-Circuit Measurement Error Mitigation | Researchia