QSim: Quantum Computer Simulator Toolkit
Playground for anyone passionate to learn or experiment in quantum computing, be it students, faculty or researchers.
About QSim
The Quantum Computing Toolkit Project is one of the first initiatives in the country to address the common challenge of advancing the Quantum Computing research frontiers in India.
The project is accomplished by multidisciplinary groups of academicians, scientists, engineers and industry from various leading organizations including – IISc, IIT-Roorkee and C-DAC.
The QSim is like a playground for anyone passionate to learn or experiment in quantum computing, be it students, faculty or researchers.
The QSim offers a robust QC Simulator integrated with a GUI based workbench in which you can create quantum circuits and quantum programs, view the outputs, online help, solved examples and related literature/material.
Features
Simulate quantum circuits
Dynamic simulation of quantum circuits with custom parameters.
Quantum Noise
Realistic simulator considering effects of noise
Intuitive UI
Intuitive UI/UX helps users to conceptualize and create quantum programs
Secured user management
Secure user management with options to save quantum programs/circuits
Code editor
Advanced Python code editor for Quantum Circuits.
Examples & Help
Online help, solved examples, and learning material.
Qiskit Aakash
Download Qiskit Aakash. The repository contains detailed examples explaining the various features of the simulator. The easiest way is to load the repository into the Binder Image and use Jupyter notebook.
The details about the implementation of the density matrix simulator have been explained in arxiv paper 1908.05154
Knowledge Base
Quantum Simulator
QSim provide a platform for researchers to explore quantum computers that are difficult to obtain. IISc has developed a realistic quantum computer simulator named dm-sim (based on Density Matrix Formalism). It simulates the behavior/execution of quantum circuits on...
Quantum Computer
Computers that perform computations using quantum phenomena such as superposition and entanglement, are known as quantum computers. Building a quantum computer is very challenging and expensive, as it requires highly sensitive components and highly controlled...
Contact Us
Have a query or a feedback? Reach out to us to learn more about the Quantum Simulator Toolkit and we will be in touch with you at the earliest.
Email Us
qcworkbench [at] cdac [dot ] in