“…Particle physics will benefit from any speedup that quantum computers can provide and the devices' ability to compute in a regime that has never been accessible before. Already, there has been a quickly developing research effort into proof-of-principle algorithms for applications in particle physics ranging from the simulation of quantum field theories (Jordan et al, 2014 ; Ciavarella et al, 2021 ; Kan and Nam, 2021 ; Paulson et al, 2021 ; Davoudi et al, 2022 ; Kane et al, 2022 ; Fromm et al, 2023 ) and collision events (Bauer et al, 2021 ; Bepari et al, 2021 , 2022 ; Gustafson et al, 2022 ; Li et al, 2022 ; Barata et al, 2023 ; Chawdhry and Pellen, 2023 ), to event classification (Blance and Spannowsky, 2020 ; Araz and Spannowsky, 2022 ) and analysis (Mott et al, 2017 ; Wu et al, 2021 ). Quantum tracking algorithms have gained a lot of interest (Shapoval and Calafiura, 2019 ; Bapst et al, 2020 ; Zlokapa et al, 2021 ; Duckett et al, 2022 ; Gray and Terashi, 2022 ) in an attempt to combat the problems facing classical techniques.…”