qubitsok.com
Cut Noise. Work Quantum.
Europe, Germany, Stuttgart
โข
Posted 28 days ago
๐ University of Stuttgart
Role Type
Role Focus
Seniority
Employer Type
This PhD research position focuses on exploring the feasibility and practicality of Measurement-Based Quantum Computing (MBQC) using integrated photonic processors. The goal is to identify MBQC's strengths, address its limitations, and implement and scale these methods. The research also involves evaluating hardware effects and developing protocols for secure quantum computing, such as blind and delegated computation.
Key Responsibilities
Explore the feasibility and practicality of Measurement-Based Quantum Computing (MBQC) to identify its strengths and address limitations.
Implement and scale MBQC protocols on integrated photonic processors, evaluating effects like photon source quality and circuit imperfections.
Use and develop state-of-the-art setups for characterizing integrated photonic circuits and photon sources.
Create and characterize highly entangled photonic resource states essential for MBQC implementation.
Realize applications in quantum computing and expand research into secure quantum computing protocols.
Required Skills
MSc in Physics, or a related field
Experience in experimental quantum optics
Experience in photonic quantum technologies
Programming skills (Python, Mathematica, or Matlab)
Technology Tags
The core hardware implementation involves photonic quantum computing and integrated photonic processors.
The research involves realizing quantum computing using integrated photonic circuits.
The project utilizes single photons within an integrated photonic system, which function as bosonic qubits.
The project requires creating and characterizing highly entangled states necessary for MBQC resource states.
A key task is evaluating the quality of photon sources used in the photonic setup.
Experimental quantum optics experience is explicitly required for working with single photons and photonic circuits.
The research expands towards secure quantum computing protocols, which falls under quantum communications applications.
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