Job Description
Join Nexus Dynamics at the forefront of 2026's technological revolution as we pioneer quantum computing solutions that will redefine global industries. We seek a visionary Quantum Computing Architect to design next-gen quantum systems capable of solving previously unsolvable computational challenges. This role offers the rare opportunity to shape the future of computational science while working with Nobel Prize-winning researchers and cutting-edge hardware. You'll lead the development of fault-tolerant quantum algorithms and hybrid quantum-classical frameworks that will power breakthroughs in materials science, cryptography, and AI optimization.
Our state-of-the-art quantum lab features 128-qubit processors and cryogenic control systems operating at near-absolute zero temperatures. As part of our 2026 Innovation Roadmap, you'll collaborate with government agencies and Fortune 500 partners to implement quantum solutions for climate modeling, drug discovery, and financial risk assessment.
Responsibilities
- Design scalable quantum architectures leveraging superconducting qubits and photonic systems
- Develop error-correction protocols for fault-tolerant quantum computation
- Create hybrid quantum-classical algorithms for enterprise applications
- Lead quantum software integration with classical HPC infrastructure
- Optimize quantum circuit compilation for multi-qubit processor topologies
- Establish quantum security frameworks for post-quantum cryptography
- Mentor cross-functional teams in quantum computing principles
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Physics, Computer Science, or Electrical Engineering
- 5+ years of experience with quantum computing frameworks (Qiskit, Cirq, Q#)
- Expertise in quantum error correction and fault-tolerance techniques
- Publication record in top-tier quantum computing journals (Nature, Science)
- Proficiency with low-level quantum hardware control systems
- Experience with high-performance computing and parallel processing
- Strong background in quantum information theory and many-body physics
- Security clearance eligibility for government collaborations