--- language: - en license: mit pretty_name: Quantum Control Pulse Instability task_categories: - tabular-classification tags: - clarusc64 - stability-reasoning - quantum-computing - control-pulses - calibration - nisq - tabular size_categories: - n<1K --- # quantum-control-pulse-instability-v0.1 ## What this dataset does This dataset evaluates whether models can detect instability in quantum control pulse regimes. Each row represents a simplified control scenario where quantum gates are implemented through microwave or optical pulse sequences. The task is to determine whether the pulse regime remains stable or becomes unstable due to drift, noise, or synchronization failures. ## Core stability idea Quantum control relies on precise pulse timing, amplitude stability, and calibration. Instability emerges when control drift and noise accumulate faster than calibration and feedback mechanisms can compensate. Signals that interact include: - qubit count - pulse amplitude stability - pulse timing jitter - calibration drift - cross-talk - thermal noise - control feedback latency - pulse sequence length - measurement error No single variable determines collapse. Instability emerges from interactions between noise, drift, and control feedback delay. ## Prediction target label = 1 → control pulse instability label = 0 → stable control regime ## Row structure Each row contains proxies describing control system stability: - qubit count - pulse amplitude proxy - pulse timing jitter proxy - calibration drift proxy - cross-talk proxy - thermal noise proxy - control feedback latency proxy - pulse sequence length - measurement error proxy ## Evaluation Predictions must follow: scenario_id,prediction Example: QP101,0 QP102,1 Run evaluation: python scorer.py --predictions predictions.csv --truth data/test.csv --output metrics.json Metrics produced: accuracy precision recall f1 confusion matrix ## Structural Note This dataset reflects latent quantum stability geometry expressed through observable control system proxies. The dataset generator and underlying stability rules are not included. This dataset is not a quantum hardware simulator. It is a compact stability-reasoning benchmark. ## License MIT