Insights Blog
-- Browse All Articles --
Physics Articles
Physics Tutorials
Physics Guides
Physics FAQ
Math Articles
Math Tutorials
Math Guides
Math FAQ
Education Articles
Education Guides
Bio/Chem Articles
Technology Guides
Computer Science Tutorials
Forums
Science and Math Textbooks
STEM Educators and Teaching
STEM Academic Advising
STEM Career Guidance
Trending
Featured Threads
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Science and Math Textbooks
STEM Educators and Teaching
STEM Academic Advising
STEM Career Guidance
Menu
Log in
Register
Navigation
More options
Contact us
Close Menu
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Forums
Science Education and Careers
STEM Career Guidance
Does the age of quantum computing mean a brighter future for physicists?
Reply to thread
Message
[QUOTE="Locrian, post: 6261984, member: 12402"] I don't see any reason it will produce a large number of jobs that require a physics specialty. Right now I'm sure having a couple of team members with a strong physics background is required for those groups working to improve the quality and number of qubits in their QC. But once you figure out how to build the QC people want, it'll be largely engineering scaling up production and programmer types doing the programming. Not that physicists can't do either of those things, but typical PhD/masters types don't have those skills. The research path to get a useful QC, which will likely take decades*, should be a fun ride for the physicists involved though. *Not counting annealing or other semi-quantum computers, a la d-wave [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Post reply
Forums
Science Education and Careers
STEM Career Guidance
Does the age of quantum computing mean a brighter future for physicists?
Back
Top