Job Description
Join InnovateTech Solutions at the forefront of 2026's technological revolution as our AI Quantum Computing Architect. We're pioneering the convergence of artificial intelligence and quantum mechanics to solve humanity's most complex challenges. This role offers the rare opportunity to shape tomorrow's computational landscape while working alongside Nobel laureates and Turing Award winners in our state-of-the-art quantum lab.
As a key member of our Future Technologies Division, you'll design hybrid quantum-AI systems that will redefine industries from drug discovery to climate modeling. We provide unparalleled resources including access to 128-qubit processors, enterprise-scale GPU clusters, and a $10M annual research budget. Your innovations will directly impact our roadmap for 2026 and beyond.
Responsibilities
- Architect scalable quantum-AI integration frameworks for enterprise applications
- Lead R&D initiatives in quantum machine learning algorithms and error correction
- Collaborate with cross-functional teams to implement quantum solutions in production environments
- Develop patents for novel quantum-AI hybrid systems with commercial potential
- Present breakthrough findings at IEEE Quantum Computing and NeurIPS conferences
- Mentor junior researchers in quantum computing principles and AI optimization
- Contribute to InnovateTech's 2026 quantum roadmap alignment with global tech standards
Qualifications
- PhD in Quantum Computing, Computer Science, or Physics with 5+ years industry experience
- Proven expertise in quantum circuit design and quantum error correction protocols
- Advanced proficiency in Python, Qiskit, and TensorFlow Quantum
- Published research in peer-reviewed journals on quantum-AI applications
- Experience with cloud quantum computing platforms (IBM Quantum, Amazon Braket)
- Demonstrated ability to lead technical teams in high-stakes research environments
- Strong understanding of NISQ-era limitations and fault-tolerant quantum computing roadmaps
- Security clearance eligibility for government-funded quantum projects