
River Lane Research
River Lane Research
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:Sandia National Laboratories, Thales Group, Chronos Technology Limited, University of Bristol, ICE Oxford Limited +104 partnersSandia National Laboratories,Thales Group,Chronos Technology Limited,University of Bristol,ICE Oxford Limited,University of Waterloo,Sandia National Laboratories California,Rigetti & Co Inc,NPL,QxBranch,ARC Centre of Excellence for Engineered Quantum Systems,Quandela SAS,NPL,QLM Technology Ltd,M Squared Lasers (United Kingdom),KETS Quantum Security Ltd,National Physical Laboratory,Google (United States),Networked Quantum Information Technology,EQUS,QuantIC,Oxford Instruments (United Kingdom),Thales (United Kingdom),ID Quantique (Switzerland),Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,Microsoft Research,Airbus Defence and Space,Riverlane,Kets-Quantum Security limited,Ultrahaptics Ltd,TREL,Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,Microsoft (United States),Quantum Communications Hub (QComm),Xanadu,RedWave Labs,Chronos Technology (United Kingdom),QuantIC,University of Sussex,Hewlett-Packard Company Inc,Thales Group,PhaseCraft Ltd.,University of Waterloo (Canada),Toshiba (United Kingdom),Rigetti & Co Inc,Quantum Benchmark,QLM Technology Ltd.,TREL,Imperial College London,QxBranch,PsiQuantum Corp.,PhaseCraft Ltd,Sandia National Laboratories,University of Cambridge,Airbus (United Kingdom),Fluoretiq,Google Inc,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,Networked Quantum Information Technology,Xanadu,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,SU,Stanford University,Quantum Technology Hub,BT Group (United Kingdom),Quandela SAS,ICE Oxford Limited,Nabla Ventures,University of Copenhagen,Airbus Defence and Space,Hewlett-Packard (United States),Nabla Ventures,Keysight Technologies (United Kingdom),Defence Science and Technology Laboratory,Thales Group (UK),Keysight Technologies UK Ltd,Quantum Communications Hub (QComm),Hewlett-Packard Company Inc,Stanford University,Microsoft Research,University of Copenhagen,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Oxford Instruments (United Kingdom),Ultrahaptics (United Kingdom),M Squared Lasers (United Kingdom),ID Quantique,Fluoretiq,BTEXACT,Quantum Benchmark,M Squared Lasers (United Kingdom),1QBit,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Oxford Instruments (United Kingdom),Chronos Technology Limited,University of Bristol,University of Sussex,RayCal,Quantum Technology Hub,Helibronn Institute,PsiQuantum Corp.,Helibronn Institute,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,BTEXACT,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,University of Waterloo (Canada),RedWave Labs,RayCal,1QBit,River Lane ResearchFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S023607/1Funder Contribution: 5,461,020 GBPQuantum Technologies (QT) are at a pivotal moment with major global efforts underway to translate quantum information science into new products that promise disruptive impact across a wide variety of sectors from communications, imaging, sensing, metrology, simulation, to computation and security. Our world-leading Centre for Doctoral Training in Quantum Engineering will evolve to be a vital component of a thriving quantum UK ecosystem, training not just highly-skilled employees, but the CEOs and CTOs of the future QT companies that will define the field. Due to the excellence of its basic science, and through investment by the national QT programme, the UK has positioned itself at the forefront of global developments. There have been very recent major [billion-dollar] investments world-wide, notably in the US, China and Europe, both from government and leading technology companies. There has also been an explosion in the number of start-up companies in the area, both in the UK and internationally. Thus, competition in this field has increased dramatically. PhD trained experts are being recruited aggressively, by both large and small firms, signalling a rapidly growing need. The supply of globally competitive talent is perhaps the biggest challenge for the UK in maintaining its leading position in QT. The new CDT will address this challenge by providing a vital source of highly-trained scientists, engineers and innovators, thus making it possible to anchor an outstanding QT sector here, and therefore ensure that UK QT delivers long-term economic and societal benefits. Recognizing the nature of the skills need is vital: QT opportunities will be at the doctoral or postdoctoral level, largely in start-ups or small interdisciplinary teams in larger organizations. With our partners we have identified the key skills our graduates need, in addition to core technical skills: interdisciplinary teamwork, leadership in large and small groups, collaborative research, an entrepreneurial mind-set, agility of thought across diverse disciplines, and management of complex projects, including systems engineering. These factors show that a new type of graduate training is needed, far from the standard PhD model. A cohort-based approach is essential. In addition to lectures, there will be seminars, labs, research and peer-to-peer learning. There will be interdisciplinary and grand challenge team projects, co-created and co-delivered with industry partners, developing a variety of important team skills. Innovation, leadership and entrepreneurship activities will be embedded from day one. At all times, our programme will maximize the benefits of a cohort-based approach. In the past two years particularly, the QT landscape has transformed, and our proposed programme, with inputs from our partners, has been designed to reflect this. Our training and research programme has evolved and broadened from our highly successful current CDT to include the challenging interplay of noisy quantum hardware and new quantum software, applied to all three QT priorities: communications; computing & simulation; and sensing, imaging & metrology. Our programme will be founded on Bristol's outstanding activity in quantum information, computation and photonics, together with world-class expertise in science and engineering in areas surrounding this core. In addition, our programme will benefit from close links to Bristol's unique local innovation environment including the visionary Quantum Technology Enterprise Centre, a fellowship programme and Skills Hub run in partnership with Cranfield University's Bettany Centre in the School of Management, as well as internationally recognised incubators/accelerators SetSquared, EngineShed, UnitDX and the recently announced £43m Quantum Technology Innovation Centre. This will all be linked within Bristol's planned £300m Temple Quarter Enterprise Campus, placing the CDT at the centre of a thriving quantum ecosystem.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2020 - 2025Partners:Durham University, National Physical Laboratory, Atomic Weapons Establishment, Durham University, Riverlane +8 partnersDurham University,National Physical Laboratory,Atomic Weapons Establishment,Durham University,Riverlane,PhaseCraft Ltd.,Rahko Limited,PhaseCraft Ltd,Rahko Limited,AWE,NPL,NPL,River Lane ResearchFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/T026715/1Funder Contribution: 163,420 GBPCCP-QC is a network linking computational scientists with quantum computing scientists and engineers, to develop some of the first useful applications of quantum computers. Quantum computing is promising fundamentally faster computation as part of broader quantum technology development that includes more secure communications, and more sensitive measurements and imaging. Our conventional computers, including those in mobile phones, modern cars, and powering the internet, are based on silicon semicoductor technology. After half a century of growth, silicon semiconductor computer chips have been at the limit of what they can do for the past decade. Faster computing requires more computers, which use more electricity and this growth is thus limited. Quantum computing uses a different logic, enabling much faster computing for some types of problems. The engineering challenges are formidable, and we are still at the stage equivalent to the first semiconductor chips in the early 1960s. Early quantum computers are already available: developing applications to suit the capabilities of this hardware is the next step, to enable us to take advantage of the opportunities they offer to speed up our computations. An important set of computational tasks in materials, chemistry, physics, biology, and engineering is developed by communities supported by collaborative computational projects (CCPs). CCP-QC will network across these CCPs and the quantum computing community, to enable the CCP communities to enhance their computations by using quantum computers. It will do this by organising joint meetings, holding training days to teach computational scientists about quantum computing, supporting small projects to develop proof-of-principle code and demonstrations on early quantum computing hardware, and providing an online information resource on early quantum computing applications. CCP-QC will interface with the new National Quantum Computing Centre, to be launched in April 2020 and based on the STFC Harwell campus in Oxfordshire. CCP-QC will enable quantum computing hardware providers to have their hardware tested with real problems of importance to the computational science communities. The outcomes of such tests can thus influence the development of quantum computing hardware, leading to faster development of useful applications that are adapted to extract the best advantage from the early quantum hardware. The simulations carried out by the CCP communities cover a wide range of important applications, from smart materials (e.g., better solar cells and batteries) to drug design (bio-molecular simulation). CCP-QC will thus contribute to the development of faster computational methods in many important applications with wide-ranging scientific, social and economic benefits.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:Cambridge Quantum Computing Limited, Networked Quantum Information Technology, SIEMENS PLC, ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG, Rigetti & Co Inc +45 partnersCambridge Quantum Computing Limited,Networked Quantum Information Technology,SIEMENS PLC,ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG,Rigetti & Co Inc,Quandela SAS,Qioptiq Ltd,UCL,PhaseCraft Ltd.,British Telecommunications plc,Quantum Motion,Toshiba (United Kingdom),Rigetti & Co Inc,Riverlane,Nature Physics,TREL,Quantemol (United Kingdom),Siemens (United Kingdom),Quandela SAS,Bluefors Oy,BT Group (United Kingdom),Microsoft (United States),Google (United States),Networked Quantum Information Technology,PhaseCraft Ltd,HGF Limited,University of Cambridge,HGF Limited,ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG,BT Group (United Kingdom),Google Inc,Qioptiq Ltd,Quantum Communications Hub (QComm),Nature Physics,Quantum Motion,TREL,Siemens PLC,Cambridge Quantum Computing Limited,Keysight Technologies,Bluefors Oy,Qinetiq (United Kingdom),Quantemol,Quantum Communications Hub (QComm),Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,SIEMENS PLC,Keysight Technologies (United States),Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Hitachi Cambridge Laboratory,Microsoft (United States),River Lane ResearchFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S021582/1Funder Contribution: 6,203,680 GBPFor many years, quantum mechanics has been a curiosity at the heart of physics. Its development was essential to many of the key breakthroughs of 20th century science, but it is famous for counter-intuitive features; the superposition illustrated by Schrödinger's cat; and the quantum entanglement responsible for Einstein's "spooky action at a distance". Quantum Technologies are based on the idea that the "weirdness" of quantum mechanics also presents a technological opportunity. Since quantum mechanical systems behave in a fundamentally different way to large-scale systems, if this behaviour could be controlled and exploited it could be utilised for fundamentally new technologies. Ideas for using quantum effects to enhancing computation, cryptography and sensing emerged in the 1980s, but the level of technology required to exploit them was out of reach. Quantum effects were only observed in systems at either very tiny scales (at the level of atoms and molecules) or very cold temperatures (a fraction of a degree above absolute zero). Many of the key quantum mechanical effects predicted many years ago were only confirmed in the laboratory in the 21st century. For example, a decisive demonstration of Einstein's spooky action at a distance was first achieved in 2015. With such rapid experimental progress in the last decade, we have reached a turning point, and quantum effects previously confined to university laboratories are now being demonstrated in commercially fabricated chips and devices. Quantum Technologies could have a profound impact on our economy and society; Quantum computers that can perform computations beyond the capabilities of the most powerful supercomputer; microscopic sensing devices with unprecedented sensitivity; communications whose security is guaranteed by the laws of physics. These technologies could be hugely transformative, with potential impacts in health-care, finance, defence, aerospace, energy and transport. While the past 30 years of quantum technology research have been largely confined to universities, the delivery of practical quantum technologies over the next 5-10 years will be defined by achievements in industrial labs and industry-academic partnerships. For this industry to develop, it will be essential that there is a workforce who can lead it. This workforce requires skills that no previous industry has utilised, combining a deep understanding of the quantum physics underlying the technologies as well as the engineering, computer science and transferrable skills to exploit them. The aim of our Centre for Doctoral Training is to train the leaders of this new industry. They will be taught advanced technical topics in physics, engineering, and computer science, alongside essential broader skills in communication and entrepreneurship. They will undertake world-class original research leading to a PhD. Throughout their studies they will be trained by, and collaborate with a network of partner organisations including world-leading companies and important national government laboratories. The graduates of our Centre for Doctoral Training will be quantum technologists, helping to create and develop this potentially revolutionary 21st-century industry in the UK.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:NPL, NPL, PhaseCraft Ltd., University of Strathclyde, Rahko Limited +3 partnersNPL,NPL,PhaseCraft Ltd.,University of Strathclyde,Rahko Limited,AWE,University of Strathclyde,River Lane ResearchFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/T026715/2Funder Contribution: 140,062 GBPCCP-QC is a network linking computational scientists with quantum computing scientists and engineers, to develop some of the first useful applications of quantum computers. Quantum computing is promising fundamentally faster computation as part of broader quantum technology development that includes more secure communications, and more sensitive measurements and imaging. Our conventional computers, including those in mobile phones, modern cars, and powering the internet, are based on silicon semicoductor technology. After half a century of growth, silicon semiconductor computer chips have been at the limit of what they can do for the past decade. Faster computing requires more computers, which use more electricity and this growth is thus limited. Quantum computing uses a different logic, enabling much faster computing for some types of problems. The engineering challenges are formidable, and we are still at the stage equivalent to the first semiconductor chips in the early 1960s. Early quantum computers are already available: developing applications to suit the capabilities of this hardware is the next step, to enable us to take advantage of the opportunities they offer to speed up our computations. An important set of computational tasks in materials, chemistry, physics, biology, and engineering is developed by communities supported by collaborative computational projects (CCPs). CCP-QC will network across these CCPs and the quantum computing community, to enable the CCP communities to enhance their computations by using quantum computers. It will do this by organising joint meetings, holding training days to teach computational scientists about quantum computing, supporting small projects to develop proof-of-principle code and demonstrations on early quantum computing hardware, and providing an online information resource on early quantum computing applications. CCP-QC will interface with the new National Quantum Computing Centre, to be launched in April 2020 and based on the STFC Harwell campus in Oxfordshire. CCP-QC will enable quantum computing hardware providers to have their hardware tested with real problems of importance to the computational science communities. The outcomes of such tests can thus influence the development of quantum computing hardware, leading to faster development of useful applications that are adapted to extract the best advantage from the early quantum hardware. The simulations carried out by the CCP communities cover a wide range of important applications, from smart materials (e.g., better solar cells and batteries) to drug design (bio-molecular simulation). CCP-QC will thus contribute to the development of faster computational methods in many important applications with wide-ranging scientific, social and economic benefits.
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