Job Description
Join Nexus Future Labs at the forefront of technological revolution as we build the quantum computing infrastructure that will power the next decade of innovation. We're seeking a visionary Quantum Computing Architect to design and implement scalable quantum systems that solve previously unsolvable problems in cryptography, materials science, and AI. You'll lead a multidisciplinary team of physicists, engineers, and software developers to pioneer breakthroughs that will redefine our technological landscape by 2026.
This role offers unparalleled opportunities to shape the future of computation while working with industry-leading quantum hardware and software platforms. You'll collaborate with global research institutions and Fortune 500 partners to translate theoretical quantum advantages into practical enterprise solutions.
Responsibilities
- Design and implement fault-tolerant quantum computing architectures for commercial applications
- Develop quantum error correction protocols and hybrid classical-quantum workflows
- Lead integration of quantum accelerators with classical HPC infrastructure
- Research and evaluate emerging quantum hardware platforms and technologies
- Create quantum algorithms optimized for real-world problem domains
- Establish quantum security frameworks for next-gen cryptographic systems
- Mentor cross-functional teams in quantum computing principles and best practices
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Computing, Physics, Computer Science, or related field (or equivalent experience)
- 5+ years of experience in quantum algorithm development or quantum hardware design
- Expertise in quantum programming languages (Q#, Qiskit, Cirq) and frameworks
- Strong foundation in quantum error correction and fault-tolerant computing
- Published research in quantum computing or related peer-reviewed journals
- Experience leading technical teams and complex R&D projects
- Proficiency in classical high-performance computing architectures
- Deep understanding of quantum mechanics and quantum information theory