Job Description
Join Nexus Quantum Labs at the frontier of 2026 technology as we pioneer next-generation quantum computing systems. We seek a visionary Quantum Computing Architect to design scalable quantum algorithms and hybrid classical-quantum architectures that will redefine computational boundaries. This role demands expertise in quantum error correction, qubit engineering, and real-time quantum-classical integration. You'll collaborate with Nobel laureates and industry disruptors to build systems capable of solving previously impossible problems in drug discovery, cryptography, and climate modeling. Our Austin innovation hub offers unparalleled resources including a 512-qubit testbed and $1B R&D fund.
Responsibilities
- Design fault-tolerant quantum circuits and error-corrected qubit architectures for 1000+ qubit systems
- Develop hybrid quantum-classical algorithms achieving quantum advantage in optimization problems
- Lead quantum hardware-software co-design initiatives with quantum chip fabrication partners
- Create quantum security protocols resistant to post-quantum cryptographic threats
- Architect quantum cloud platforms serving enterprise clients in finance and pharmaceuticals
- Present quantum computing roadmaps to C-suite executives and government agencies
- Mentor quantum engineering teams in cutting-edge techniques like topological qubit manipulation
- File patents for novel quantum gate architectures and quantum memory systems
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Physics, Computer Science, or Electrical Engineering with 5+ years quantum computing experience
- Published research in Nature/Science on quantum error correction or fault-tolerant architectures
- Expertise in quantum programming languages (Q#, Qiskit, Cirq) and simulation frameworks
- Proven track record designing quantum algorithms for NISQ-era hardware
- Deep understanding of quantum hardware constraints (qubit coherence, gate fidelity)
- Experience with quantum cloud platforms (IBM Quantum, Amazon Braket, Azure Quantum)
- Strong background in topological quantum computing or trapped-ion systems
- Security clearance or ability to obtain government research credentials