Job Description
Join Nexus Future Labs at the forefront of technological evolution as we pioneer quantum computing solutions for 2026 and beyond. We seek a visionary Quantum Computing Architect to design next-generation quantum systems that will redefine computational boundaries. This role demands a blend of theoretical physics expertise and hands-on engineering prowess to build scalable, fault-tolerant quantum architectures. You'll collaborate with Nobel laureates, startup founders, and government agencies to translate quantum theory into revolutionary applications across cryptography, AI, and materials science. Our San Francisco hub offers unparalleled access to quantum hardware pioneers and venture capital in the emerging tech ecosystem.
Responsibilities
- Design and implement fault-tolerant quantum computing architectures using topological qubits and error correction protocols
- Develop hybrid quantum-classical algorithms for optimization problems in logistics and drug discovery
- Lead cross-disciplinary R&D initiatives with quantum hardware manufacturers and materials science labs
- Create quantum security frameworks for post-quantum cryptography systems
- Develop quantum machine learning pipelines for predictive analytics in climate modeling
- Architect quantum cloud infrastructure with 99.999% uptime and sub-millisecond latency
- Secure patents for novel quantum gate designs and entanglement distribution methods
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Physics, Computer Science, or Electrical Engineering with 5+ years industry experience
- Proficiency in quantum programming languages (Q#, Qiskit, Cirq) and quantum circuit design
- Published research in top-tier journals (Nature, Science, PRL) on quantum error correction
- Expertise in superconducting qubit systems or trapped-ion quantum processors
- Certification in quantum security protocols (e.g., NIST Post-Quantum Cryptography standards)
- Track record of leading quantum computing projects with $1M+ budgets
- Deep understanding of quantum annealing, variational quantum algorithms, and quantum supremacy