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@TECHREPORT{Bartsch:916633,
      author       = {Bartsch, Valeria and Colin de Verdière, Guillaume and
                      Nominé, Jean-Philippe and Ottaviani, Daniele and Dragoni,
                      Daniele and Bouazza, Chayma and Magugliani, Fabrizio and
                      Bowden, David and Allouche, Cyril and Johansson, Mikael and
                      Terzo, Olivier and Scarabosio, Andrea and Vitali, Giacomo
                      and Shagieva, Farida and Michielsen, Kristel},
      title        = {$\<$ {QC} | {HPC} $\>:$ {Q}uantum for {HPC}},
      number       = {0},
      publisher    = {ETP4HPC},
      reportid     = {FZJ-2022-06384, 0},
      pages        = {16 p},
      year         = {2021},
      abstract     = {Quantum Computing (QC) describes a new way of computing
                      based on the principles of quantum mechanics. From a High
                      Performance Computing (HPC) perspective, QC needs to be
                      integrated: at a system level, where quantum computer
                      technologies need to be integrated in HPC clusters; at a
                      programming level, where the new disruptive ways of
                      programming devices call for a full hardware-software stack
                      to be built; at an application level, where QC is bound to
                      lead to disruptive changes in the complexity of some
                      applications so that compute-intensive or intractable
                      problems in the HPC domain might become tractable in the
                      future. The White Paper QC for HPC focuses on the technology
                      integration of QC in HPC clusters, gives an overview of the
                      full hardware-software stack and QC emulators, and
                      highlights promising customised QC algorithms for near-term
                      quantum computers and its impact on HPC applications. In
                      addition to universal quantum computers, we will describe
                      non-universal QC where appropriate. Recent research
                      references will be used to cover the basic concepts.
                      Thetarget audience of this paper is the European HPC
                      community: members of HPC centres, HPC algorithm developers,
                      scientists interested in the co-design for quantum hardware,
                      benchmarking, etc.},
      cin          = {JSC},
      cid          = {I:(DE-Juel1)JSC-20090406},
      pnm          = {5111 - Domain-Specific Simulation $\&$ Data Life Cycle Labs
                      (SDLs) and Research Groups (POF4-511)},
      pid          = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-5111},
      typ          = {PUB:(DE-HGF)29},
      doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.5555960},
      url          = {https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/916633},
}