MCP HubMCP Hub
스킬 목록으로 돌아가기

qiskit

K-Dense-AI
업데이트됨 Today
26,534
2,743
26,534
GitHub에서 보기
기타general

정보

Qiskit은 IBM의 양자 컴퓨팅 프레임워크로, 회로 구축, 하드웨어 최적화, IBM Quantum 시스템 또는 시뮬레이터에서 작업을 실행하는 데 사용됩니다. Qiskit Runtime, 양자 오류 완화 및 엔터프라이즈 애플리케이션을 활용한 프로덕션 작업에 탁월합니다. IBM 하드웨어를 특정 대상으로 하거나 해당 최적화 도구가 필요할 때 이 스킬을 사용하세요.

빠른 설치

Claude Code

추천
기본
npx skills add K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills -a claude-code
플러그인 명령대체
/plugin add https://github.com/K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills
Git 클론대체
git clone https://github.com/K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/qiskit

Claude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요

문서

Qiskit

Overview

Qiskit is the world's most popular open-source quantum computing framework with 13M+ downloads. Build quantum circuits, optimize for hardware, execute on simulators or real quantum computers, and analyze results. Supports IBM Quantum (100+ qubit systems), IonQ, Amazon Braket, and other providers.

Key Features:

  • 83x faster transpilation than competitors
  • 29% fewer two-qubit gates in optimized circuits
  • Backend-agnostic execution (local simulators or cloud hardware)
  • Comprehensive algorithm libraries for optimization, chemistry, and ML

Quick Start

Installation

uv pip install qiskit
uv pip install "qiskit[visualization]" matplotlib

First Circuit

from qiskit import QuantumCircuit
from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler

# Create Bell state (entangled qubits)
qc = QuantumCircuit(2)
qc.h(0)           # Hadamard on qubit 0
qc.cx(0, 1)       # CNOT from qubit 0 to 1
qc.measure_all()  # Measure both qubits

# Run locally
sampler = StatevectorSampler()
result = sampler.run([qc], shots=1024).result()
counts = result[0].data.meas.get_counts()
print(counts)  # {'00': ~512, '11': ~512}

Visualization

from qiskit.visualization import plot_histogram

qc.draw('mpl')           # Circuit diagram
plot_histogram(counts)   # Results histogram

Core Capabilities

1. Setup and Installation

For detailed installation, authentication, and IBM Quantum account setup:

  • See references/setup.md

Topics covered:

  • Installation with uv
  • Python environment setup
  • IBM Quantum account and API token configuration
  • Local vs. cloud execution

2. Building Quantum Circuits

For constructing quantum circuits with gates, measurements, and composition:

  • See references/circuits.md

Topics covered:

  • Creating circuits with QuantumCircuit
  • Single-qubit gates (H, X, Y, Z, rotations, phase gates)
  • Multi-qubit gates (CNOT, SWAP, Toffoli)
  • Measurements and barriers
  • Circuit composition and properties
  • Parameterized circuits for variational algorithms

3. Primitives (Sampler and Estimator)

For executing quantum circuits and computing results:

  • See references/primitives.md

Topics covered:

  • Sampler: Get bitstring measurements and probability distributions
  • Estimator: Compute expectation values of observables
  • V2 interface (StatevectorSampler, StatevectorEstimator)
  • IBM Quantum Runtime primitives for hardware
  • Sessions and Batch modes
  • Parameter binding

4. Transpilation and Optimization

For optimizing circuits and preparing for hardware execution:

  • See references/transpilation.md

Topics covered:

  • Why transpilation is necessary
  • Optimization levels (0-3)
  • Six transpilation stages (init, layout, routing, translation, optimization, scheduling)
  • Advanced features (virtual permutation elision, gate cancellation)
  • Common parameters (initial_layout, approximation_degree, seed)
  • Best practices for efficient circuits

5. Visualization

For displaying circuits, results, and quantum states:

  • See references/visualization.md

Topics covered:

  • Circuit drawings (text, matplotlib, LaTeX)
  • Result histograms
  • Quantum state visualization (Bloch sphere, state city, QSphere)
  • Backend topology and error maps
  • Customization and styling
  • Saving publication-quality figures

6. Hardware Backends

For running on simulators and real quantum computers:

  • See references/backends.md

Topics covered:

  • IBM Quantum backends and authentication
  • Backend properties and status
  • Running on real hardware with Runtime primitives
  • Job management and queuing
  • Session mode (iterative algorithms)
  • Batch mode (parallel jobs)
  • Local simulators (StatevectorSampler, Aer)
  • Third-party providers (IonQ, Amazon Braket)
  • Error mitigation strategies

7. Qiskit Patterns Workflow

For implementing the four-step quantum computing workflow:

  • See references/patterns.md

Topics covered:

  • Map: Translate problems to quantum circuits
  • Optimize: Transpile for hardware
  • Execute: Run with primitives
  • Post-process: Extract and analyze results
  • Complete VQE example
  • Session vs. Batch execution
  • Common workflow patterns

8. Quantum Algorithms and Applications

For implementing specific quantum algorithms:

  • See references/algorithms.md

Topics covered:

  • Optimization: VQE, QAOA, Grover's algorithm
  • Chemistry: Molecular ground states, excited states, Hamiltonians
  • Machine Learning: Quantum kernels, VQC, QNN
  • Algorithm libraries: Qiskit Nature, Qiskit ML, Qiskit Optimization
  • Physics simulations and benchmarking

Workflow Decision Guide

If you need to:

  • Install Qiskit or set up IBM Quantum account → references/setup.md
  • Build a new quantum circuit → references/circuits.md
  • Understand gates and circuit operations → references/circuits.md
  • Run circuits and get measurements → references/primitives.md
  • Compute expectation values → references/primitives.md
  • Optimize circuits for hardware → references/transpilation.md
  • Visualize circuits or results → references/visualization.md
  • Execute on IBM Quantum hardware → references/backends.md
  • Connect to third-party providers → references/backends.md
  • Implement end-to-end quantum workflow → references/patterns.md
  • Build specific algorithm (VQE, QAOA, etc.) → references/algorithms.md
  • Solve chemistry or optimization problems → references/algorithms.md

Best Practices

Development Workflow

  1. Start with simulators: Test locally before using hardware

    from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler
    sampler = StatevectorSampler()
    
  2. Always transpile: Optimize circuits before execution

    from qiskit import transpile
    qc_optimized = transpile(qc, backend=backend, optimization_level=3)
    
  3. Use appropriate primitives:

    • Sampler for bitstrings (optimization algorithms)
    • Estimator for expectation values (chemistry, physics)
  4. Choose execution mode:

    • Session: Iterative algorithms (VQE, QAOA)
    • Batch: Independent parallel jobs
    • Single job: One-off experiments

Performance Optimization

  • Use optimization_level=3 for production
  • Minimize two-qubit gates (major error source)
  • Test with noisy simulators before hardware
  • Save and reuse transpiled circuits
  • Monitor convergence in variational algorithms

Hardware Execution

  • Check backend status before submitting
  • Use least_busy() for testing
  • Save job IDs for later retrieval
  • Apply error mitigation (resilience_level)
  • Start with fewer shots, increase for final runs

Common Patterns

Pattern 1: Simple Circuit Execution

from qiskit import QuantumCircuit, transpile
from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler

qc = QuantumCircuit(2)
qc.h(0)
qc.cx(0, 1)
qc.measure_all()

sampler = StatevectorSampler()
result = sampler.run([qc], shots=1024).result()
counts = result[0].data.meas.get_counts()

Pattern 2: Hardware Execution with Transpilation

from qiskit_ibm_runtime import QiskitRuntimeService, SamplerV2 as Sampler
from qiskit import transpile

service = QiskitRuntimeService()
backend = service.backend("ibm_brisbane")

qc_optimized = transpile(qc, backend=backend, optimization_level=3)

sampler = Sampler(backend)
job = sampler.run([qc_optimized], shots=1024)
result = job.result()

Pattern 3: Variational Algorithm (VQE)

from qiskit_ibm_runtime import Session, EstimatorV2 as Estimator
from scipy.optimize import minimize

with Session(backend=backend) as session:
    estimator = Estimator(session=session)

    def cost_function(params):
        bound_qc = ansatz.assign_parameters(params)
        qc_isa = transpile(bound_qc, backend=backend)
        result = estimator.run([(qc_isa, hamiltonian)]).result()
        return result[0].data.evs

    result = minimize(cost_function, initial_params, method='COBYLA')

Additional Resources

GitHub 저장소

K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills
경로: skills/qiskit
0
agent-skillsai-scientistbioinformaticschemoinformaticsclaudeclaude-skills

연관 스킬

llamaguard

기타

LlamaGuard는 폭력 및 혐오 발언 등 6가지 안전 범주에서 LLM 입력과 출력을 조정하기 위한 Meta의 70-80억 파라미터 모델입니다. 94-95% 정확도를 제공하며 vLLM, Hugging Face 또는 Amazon SageMaker를 사용해 배포할 수 있습니다. 이 기술을 사용하여 AI 애플리케이션에 콘텐츠 필터링 및 안전 가드레일을 손쉽게 통합하세요.

스킬 보기

cost-optimization

기타

이 Claude Skill은 리소스 적정화, 태깅 전략, 지출 분석을 통해 개발자들이 클라우드 비용을 최적화할 수 있도록 지원합니다. AWS, Azure, GCP에서 클라우드 비용을 절감하고 비용 거버넌스를 구현하기 위한 프레임워크를 제공합니다. 인프라 비용을 분석하거나, 리소스를 적정화하거나, 예산 제약을 충족해야 할 때 사용하세요.

스킬 보기

quantizing-models-bitsandbytes

기타

이 스킬은 bitsandbytes를 사용하여 LLM을 8비트 또는 4비트 정밀도로 양자화하며, 최소한의 정확도 손실로 50-75%의 메모리 감소를 달성합니다. 제한된 GPU 메모리에서 더 큰 모델을 실행하거나 추론을 가속화하는 데 이상적이며, INT8, NF4, FP4와 같은 형식을 지원합니다. 이 스킬은 HuggingFace Transformers와 통합되어 QLoRA 학습 및 8비트 옵티마이저를 가능하게 합니다.

스킬 보기

dispatching-parallel-agents

기타

이 Claude Skill은 3개 이상의 독립적인 문제를 동시에 조사하고 해결하기 위해 다중 에이전트를 배치합니다. 공유 상태나 의존성 없이 해결 가능한 무관련 장애 시나리오에 맞게 설계되었습니다. 핵심 기능은 병렬 문제 해결로, 각 독립 문제 영역마다 하나의 에이전트를 할당하여 효율성을 극대화합니다.

스킬 보기