Rigetti Enhances Predictive Weather Modeling with Quantum Machine Learning

Example test data input and radar product

Three examples from top to bottom showing a subset of input data, weather products from the QNN model, and the ground truth measurements.Three examples from top to bottom showing a subset of input data, weather products from the QNN model, and the ground truth measurements.
Three examples from top to bottom showing a subset of input data, weather products from the QNN model, and the ground truth measurements.
Three examples from top to bottom showing a subset of input data, weather products from the QNN model, and the ground truth measurements.

BERKELEY, Calif., Dec. 01, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Rigetti Computing, a pioneer in hybrid quantum-classical computing, announced today it has developed an effective solution to a weather modeling problem using quantum computers. Building on existing machine learning workflows, the company applied a combination of classical and quantum machine learning techniques to produce high-quality synthetic weather radar data and improve classical models for storm prediction. The work was performed on Rigetti’s 32-qubit system, demonstrating that practical applications are within reach for near-term quantum hardware.

“These results set the stage for achieving quantum advantage on a high-impact, operationally relevant problem,” said Chad Rigetti, founder and CEO of Rigetti Computing. “We’ve shown that quantum computers can be integrated effectively into state-of-the-art classical workflows and perform tasks with real-world significance.”

Private weather forecasting in the United States is a $7 billion industry and growing, according to a 2017 study by the National Weather Service. The study estimates that businesses could derive as much as $13 billion in economic value from tailored weather data for a variety of weather-related applications. It also suggests that continued improvements in weather forecasting could lead to significant gains in economic value across all sectors, as businesses and governments are better able to prepare for disasters, reduce risk, and drive critical decision making.

Generative machine learning models have emerged as a powerful new tool for enhancing predictive capabilities. One such model is the Offshore Precipitation Capability (OPC), a convolutional neural network developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory. OPC integrates several inputs including satellite imagery, lightning strike data, and numerical models to generate synthetic radar-like data for regions outside traditional weather radar coverage. These models inform critical decisions in areas such as off-shore air traffic management for civilian and military aviation.

In a new study released today, Rigetti demonstrated a hybrid quantum approach that performed as well as a classical baseline model, using synthetic data produced by a supervised quantum machine learning model. They also found that replacing one layer of the OPC classical neural network with a quantum convolutional layer improved the model’s ability to predict inclement weather.

“We believe that quantum computers will be most valuable when they operate in tandem with classical computers,” said Matt Reagor, VP of Quantum Engineering at Rigetti. “These results confirm that quantum subroutines can be inserted directly into a practical machine learning workflow. In addition, the techniques we developed are transferable to applications in other areas such as computational finance, genomics, and image processing.”

Rigetti will present these findings at the Artificial Intelligence for Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Response Workshop on December 13, as part of the NeurIPS 2021 virtual conference.

This research was funded in part by the U.S. Government. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the U.S. Government.

About Rigetti Computing

Rigetti Computing is a pioneer in full-stack quantum computing. The company has operated quantum computers over the cloud since 2017 and serves global enterprise, government, and research clients through its Rigetti Quantum Cloud Services platform. The company’s proprietary quantum-classical infrastructure provides ultra-low latency integration with public and private clouds for high-performance practical quantum computing. Rigetti has developed the industry’s first multi-chip quantum processor for scalable quantum computing systems. The company designs and manufactures its chips in-house at Fab-1, the industry’s first dedicated and integrated quantum device manufacturing facility. Rigetti was founded in 2013 by Chad Rigetti and today employs more than 140 people with offices in the United States, U.K., and Australia. Learn more at rigetti.com.

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CONTACT: Lauren Rugani Rigetti Computing press@rigetti.com


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