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Hardware-Faithful Digital Twins for Quantum Computing with Izhar Medalsy

5/4/202638 min

Hardware-Faithful Digital Twins for Quantum Computing with Izhar Medalsy

Izhar Medalsy is not a career qubit theorist. His path runs from a physical chemistry PhD and an ETH Zurich postdoc in atomic force microscopy and ternary nanoscale logic, through productizing scientific instruments at Bruker, through building one of the fastest resin 3D printers on the market, into co-founding Quantum Elements in 2023 with Daniel Lidar (USC) and Amir Yacoby (Harvard). That arc — nanoscale measurement scientist turned deep-tech operator — shapes how he thinks about the simulation gap in quantum computing.

The conversation lands at a specific moment. In April 2026, Quantum Elements published a joint result with AWS, USC, and Harvard simulating a distance-7 rotated surface code with 97 physical qubits using full quantum master equations on AWS HPC7a, and announced a deeper collaboration with Rigetti Computing on next-generation superconducting processors. If you care about how error correction strategies, decoders, and pulse-level controls actually get developed before they ever touch hardware, this episode is for you.

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What We Get Into

  • Why generic noise models fall short and what "hardware-faithful" actually means when two nominally identical QPUs have different noise fingerprints
  • How Quantum Elements scaled open-system master-equation simulation from a brute-force ceiling around 16 qubits to 97 qubits using stochastic compression on top of Quantum Monte Carlo
  • The compute reality of the distance-7 surface code run on AWS HPC7a — only 96 vCPUs and a few hundred gigabytes of memory, not the thousands of vCPUs they initially feared
  • Why decoders are the invisible bottleneck in fault tolerance, and where AI-trained decoders fed by digital twin data could plausibly run inside the real-time quantum-classical loop
  • Extending error suppression from physical qubits up to logical qubits — the IBM Eagle work where digital-twin-guided strategies reportedly took entangled logical qubit fidelity from 43% to 95%
  • How the same digital twin approach extends to neutral atoms (live today) and ion traps (on the roadmap)
  • What Rigetti gets out of the partnership, what it means to have Chad Rigetti on the board, and how Constellation fits alongside real hardware time
  • Izhar's "wooden models in the air tunnel" critique of how the quantum industry currently iterates — and what a parallel virtual development track buys you

Resources & Links

Guest & Company

Papers & Articles

Key Quotes & Insights

  • "Sometimes when I look at the quantum industry, there are instances where you think, well, it's almost like building the next fighter jet with wooden models in the air tunnel." — Izhar's framing for why the field needs a real simulation layer.
  • On hardware awareness: each modality, each QPU, sometimes each calibration cycle has its own pulses, its own noise processes, and its own failure modes. You cannot build the control stack without modeling where you are starting from and where you are trying to get to.
  • Insight: The brute-force ceiling for open-system master-equation simulation is roughly 16 qubits. Stochastic compression layered on Quantum Monte Carlo is what let Quantum Elements reach distance-7 surface code at 97 qubits — exploiting sparsity rather than enumerating the full state space.
  • On logical qubits: "We cannot assume that logical qubits will be noise-free." Error suppression strategies developed at the physical level need to be re-derived at the logical level, and digital twins are how you train and test those strategies before hardware.
  • Insight: The most interesting downstream story may not be simulation itself but AI decoders trained on digital-twin-generated data — small enough to run at the edge, fast enough to live inside the real-time quantum-classical loop.

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Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Sebastian Hassinger· Host0:00

    [instrumental music] Welcome back to the New Quantum Era. I'm Sebastian Hasinger. My guest today is Yishar Medalsky, co-founder and CEO of Quantum Elements. Yishar is one of the more unusual founders I've encountered in this field. He's not a quantum physicist, but someone who arrived at quantum computing through a long arc of adjacent disciplines. He started in neuroscience, moved into physical chemistry, and did his PhD and postdoc work at the intersection of quantum dots and protein nanostructures using atomic force microscopy to build nanoscale logic devices. From there, he spent more than a decade actually shipping complex hardware-software products, productizing AFM instruments at Bruker, then as chief product officer and CTO of Nexa3D, getting one of the fastest resin 3D printers on the market to manufacturing scale. That combination of first principles physics and hard-won product discipline is a rare thing in deep tech, and it shapes how he thinks about the problem Quantum Elements was built to solve. The company, which he co-founded in 2023 with Harvard experimentalist

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