Breakout 4: Quantum computing and other technologies

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4. Quantum computing and other technologies for modeling: quantum sensors, neuromorphic chips. emerging compute capabilities

MSM lead: Suvranu De; IMAG lead: Orlando Lopez, Raj Gupta

  • How can these technologies be used in the IMAG initiatives discussed in Session 2.1?
  • Determine criteria for assessing the relevance of quantum computing for specific applications vis a vis classical computing?
  • What would be some use-cases for quantum computing that we share with the community?
  • Are there thoughts on the use of quantum annealing for optimization problems?
  • What would some safety and risk implications of quantum capabilities into medical devices in terms of regulatory (safety and effectiveness) perspectives? What would be some mitigation strategies?

 

Resources:

MSM High Performance Computing WG

https://datascience.nih.gov/news/nih-virtual-workshop-near-term-applica…

https://news.fsu.edu/news/science-technology/2023/04/12/fsu-announces-bold-investments-in-quantum-science-and-engineering/

Comment

Quantum Computing @ Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic and IBM started a 10 year partnership, where quantum computing plays an significant role. We have an IBM Quantum System One (127 qubits) installed on campus and seeded many projects to explore quantum computing advantage for biomedical research. 

 https://my.clevelandclinic.org/research/computational-life-sciences/dis…

I was not able to make it to MSM in person. That said, I am happy to chat. 

Ahmet (erdemira@ccf.org)

Submitted by aerdemir on Thu, 06/29/2023 - 12:23