Updated
Updated · Quantum Computing Report · May 30
Quantum Machines Hits 99.5% Two-Qubit Fidelity on Rigetti’s 9-Qubit Novera With External Control
Updated
Updated · Quantum Computing Report · May 30

Quantum Machines Hits 99.5% Two-Qubit Fidelity on Rigetti’s 9-Qubit Novera With External Control

2 articles · Updated · Quantum Computing Report · May 30
  • 99.5% median two-qubit gate fidelity was achieved by Quantum Machines on Rigetti’s commercially available Novera QPU using external hardware and software rather than Rigetti’s native control stack.
  • 10 days of onsite optimization through QM’s OPX1000 orchestration platform and QUAlibrate automation software brought the system to full calibration, matching Rigetti’s peak internal calibration metrics.
  • 99.93% median single-qubit fidelity across all nine transmons and 99.5% across 11 active couplings suggest the external setup can hold low error rates while reducing phase noise and thermal fluctuations.
  • The result supports a hardware-agnostic, open-architecture model for superconducting quantum systems, easing multi-vendor deployments for labs that need direct access to tuning, error-mitigation and algorithm-testing workflows.
  • Fermilab, Montana State University, Horizon Quantum Computing and systems integrator TreQ are already using QM’s platform with Novera or broader multi-QPU installations, pointing to wider enterprise and research adoption.
Will decoupling hardware and controls accelerate the path to fault-tolerant quantum computers?
As hardware opens up, is the next quantum race a battle for the 'operating system'?

99.5% Gate Fidelity on Rigetti Novera: Quantum Machines Demonstrates High-Performance External Quantum Control

Overview

On May 30, 2026, Quantum Machines achieved a major milestone by operating Rigetti’s Novera superconducting quantum processor with their own external control hardware and software, reaching a 99.5% median two-qubit gate fidelity. This success shows that high-performance quantum operations are possible without relying on proprietary, integrated control systems. Instead, independent and specialized external solutions can deliver excellent results. The breakthrough highlights a growing trend towards greater flexibility, standardization, and openness in quantum computing, signaling the maturity of the broader ecosystem and paving the way for more scalable and interoperable quantum technologies.

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