Agent skill

qiskit

IBM quantum computing framework. Use when targeting IBM Quantum hardware, working with Qiskit Runtime for production workloads, or needing IBM optimization tools. Best for IBM hardware execution, quantum error mitigation, and enterprise quantum computing. For Google hardware use cirq; for gradient-based quantum ML use pennylane; for open quantum system simulations use qutip.

Stars 16,890
Forks 1,841

Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills/tree/main/scientific-skills/qiskit

Metadata

Additional technical details for this skill

skill author
K-Dense Inc.

SKILL.md

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

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

First Circuit

python
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

python
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

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

    python
    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

python
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

python
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)

python
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

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

pufferlib

High-performance reinforcement learning framework optimized for speed and scale. Use when you need fast parallel training, vectorized environments, multi-agent systems, or integration with game environments (Atari, Procgen, NetHack). Achieves 2-10x speedups over standard implementations. For quick prototyping or standard algorithm implementations with extensive documentation, use stable-baselines3 instead.

16,890 1,841
Explore
K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

fluidsim

Framework for computational fluid dynamics simulations using Python. Use when running fluid dynamics simulations including Navier-Stokes equations (2D/3D), shallow water equations, stratified flows, or when analyzing turbulence, vortex dynamics, or geophysical flows. Provides pseudospectral methods with FFT, HPC support, and comprehensive output analysis.

16,890 1,841
Explore
K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

geniml

This skill should be used when working with genomic interval data (BED files) for machine learning tasks. Use for training region embeddings (Region2Vec, BEDspace), single-cell ATAC-seq analysis (scEmbed), building consensus peaks (universes), or any ML-based analysis of genomic regions. Applies to BED file collections, scATAC-seq data, chromatin accessibility datasets, and region-based genomic feature learning.

16,890 1,841
Explore
K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

astropy

Comprehensive Python library for astronomy and astrophysics. This skill should be used when working with astronomical data including celestial coordinates, physical units, FITS files, cosmological calculations, time systems, tables, world coordinate systems (WCS), and astronomical data analysis. Use when tasks involve coordinate transformations, unit conversions, FITS file manipulation, cosmological distance calculations, time scale conversions, or astronomical data processing.

16,890 1,841
Explore
K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

pyhealth

Comprehensive healthcare AI toolkit for developing, testing, and deploying machine learning models with clinical data. This skill should be used when working with electronic health records (EHR), clinical prediction tasks (mortality, readmission, drug recommendation), medical coding systems (ICD, NDC, ATC), physiological signals (EEG, ECG), healthcare datasets (MIMIC-III/IV, eICU, OMOP), or implementing deep learning models for healthcare applications (RETAIN, SafeDrug, Transformer, GNN).

16,890 1,841
Explore
K-Dense-AI/claude-scientific-skills

research-lookup

Look up current research information using the Parallel Chat API (primary) or Perplexity sonar-pro-search (academic paper searches). Automatically routes queries to the best backend. Use for finding papers, gathering research data, and verifying scientific information.

16,890 1,841
Explore

Didn't find tool you were looking for?

Be as detailed as possible for better results