University of Missouri Quantum Innovation Center (MU)
Permanent URI for this community
The University of Missouri System’s Quantum Innovation Center (MU QIC), in partnership with IBM Quantum, provides the opportunity to access quantum computers to researchers and their collaborators at the University of Missouri and across the University of Missouri System.
Researchers have premium access to several 100+ qubit quantum computers developed by IBM. IBM continually adds new quantum computers to its fleet as it retires others, and so the makeup of the fleet may vary from time to time. Currently our access includes two 156-qubit Heron systems, capable of running 5,000 two-qubit gate operations which surpass classically simulatable experiments.
Users are able to evaluate, explore, and execute quantum computing through an API that provides runtime-level access to IBM’s quantum computers via the Qiskit Runtime environment. UM System researchers also have the opportunity to access IBM’s learning and training materials, working groups and research engagements.
We ask that when you cite the MU QIC in a publication to send an email to itrss-support@umsystem.edu and share a copy of the publication with us. To cite the use of this resource in a publication please use:
The computation for this work was performed on the University of Missouri’s Quantum Innovation Center, in partnership with IBM Quantum and facilitated by Research Support Services at the University of Missouri, Columbia MO. DOI: 10.32469/10355/107781
Researchers have premium access to several 100+ qubit quantum computers developed by IBM. IBM continually adds new quantum computers to its fleet as it retires others, and so the makeup of the fleet may vary from time to time. Currently our access includes two 156-qubit Heron systems, capable of running 5,000 two-qubit gate operations which surpass classically simulatable experiments.
Users are able to evaluate, explore, and execute quantum computing through an API that provides runtime-level access to IBM’s quantum computers via the Qiskit Runtime environment. UM System researchers also have the opportunity to access IBM’s learning and training materials, working groups and research engagements.
We ask that when you cite the MU QIC in a publication to send an email to itrss-support@umsystem.edu and share a copy of the publication with us. To cite the use of this resource in a publication please use:
The computation for this work was performed on the University of Missouri’s Quantum Innovation Center, in partnership with IBM Quantum and facilitated by Research Support Services at the University of Missouri, Columbia MO. DOI: 10.32469/10355/107781
