NQIT Studentships Announced
These EPSRC Doctoral Training Partnership (DTP) studentships provide funding for a 3-year PhD. Applications are open for all 16 right now and you will need to apply via the host university. Deadlines vary between each university.
Here is the full list of studentships, including a link to the relevant application website and the email address of the lead supervisor, whom you can contact for further information:
Hybrid Quantum-Classical DMFT simulations, Dieter Jaksch (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Oxford
- Contact: Dieter Jaksch
Defect engineering in diamond for magnetic field mapping and gradiometry, Jason Smith & Martin Booth (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Materials, University of Oxford
- Contact: Jason Smith
Multi-zone ion trap for Q20:20 node, David Lucas (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Oxford
- Contact: David Lucas
Architectures for near-future quantum machine learning and optimisation, Simon Benjamin (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Materials, University of Oxford
- Contact: Simon Benjamin
Quantum computing with photonic networks, Almut Beige (University of Leeds), with Axel Kuhn (University of Oxford) and Elham Kashefi (University of Edinburgh)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Leeds
- Contact: Almut Beige
Building a node in a diamond quantum computer, Gavin Morley, Mark Newton and Animesh Datta (University of Warwick)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Warwick
- Contact: Gavin Morley
Coherent Absorption Ladder Quantum Memory, Josh Nunn (University of Bath)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Bath
- Contact: Joshua Nunn
Quantum networking of trapped-ion qubits, David Lucas and Andrew Steane (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Oxford
- Contact: David Lucas
Advanced fibre-integrated single photon sources: frequency conversion meets multiplexing, Peter Mosley (University of Bath)
- Application: Find a PhD
- Contact: Peter Mosley
Developing an ion trap quantum co-processor, Winni Hensinger (University of Sussex)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Sussex
- Contact: Winfried Hensinger
Ultra-low loss optical switches for Ion trap entanglement, James Gates, Corin Gawith and Paul Gow (University of Southampton)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Southampton
- Contact: James Gates
Diamond membrane devices for efficient coupling to vacancy centres, Michael Strain (University of Strathclyde)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Strathclyde
- Contact: Michael Strain
Efficient quantum device tuning using machine learning, Edward Laird, Natalia Ares, Andrew Briggs, and Simon Benjamin (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Materials, University of Oxford
- Contact: Edward Laird
Demonstrating Quantum Speed up on the NQIT machine, Elham Kashefi (University of Edinburgh)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Edinburgh
- Contact: Elham Kashefi
Microwave to optical conversion, Lapo Bogani, Edward Laird, Andrew Briggs, Martin Kiffner and Dieter Jaksch (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Materials, University of Oxford
- Contact: Lapo Bogani
Efficient Chip-Integrated Photon Counting Detectors, Ian Walmsley and Steven Kolthammer (University of Oxford)
- Application: Department of Physics, University of Oxford
- Contact: Steven Kolthammer