Job Description
Join FutureTech Innovations at the forefront of technological disruption as we pioneer quantum computing solutions for 2026 and beyond. We're seeking a visionary Quantum Computing Researcher to architect the next generation of computational systems that will redefine industries worldwide. In this role, you'll collaborate with Nobel laureates and industry pioneers in our state-of-the-art San Francisco lab, developing breakthrough algorithms that solve previously impossible problems in cryptography, materials science, and artificial intelligence.
We offer an unparalleled environment where curiosity meets resources: access to IBM Quantum One, NVIDIA's latest quantum-accelerated hardware, and a $50M research budget. Your work will directly impact Fortune 500 clients in finance, healthcare, and logistics while mentoring the next wave of quantum engineers. This isn't just a jobβit's your opportunity to shape the computational paradigm of the next decade.
Responsibilities
- Design and implement quantum algorithms for complex optimization problems in finance and logistics
- Lead cross-functional R&D teams to prototype quantum-accelerated machine learning models
- Develop error-correction protocols for fault-tolerant quantum systems
- Collaborate with hardware teams to co-design quantum processors with 1000+ qubits
- Publish breakthrough research in Nature Physics and IEEE Quantum journals
- Secure $10M+ in government and private research grants
- Mentor PhD candidates through FutureTech's Quantum Fellowship Program
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Physics, Computer Science, or Mathematics from top-tier institution
- 3+ years hands-on experience with quantum programming languages (Q#, Qiskit, Cirq)
- Published research in quantum error correction or quantum machine learning
- Expertise in quantum circuit optimization and decoherence mitigation
- Proficiency in Python, C++, and high-performance computing frameworks
- Demonstrated success in securing government research grants
- Experience mentoring postgraduate researchers in quantum technologies