
Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL
Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL
12 Projects, page 1 of 3
assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2033Partners:PhaseCraft Ltd, BT plc, UCL, SeeQC UK, National Physical Laboratory NPL +19 partnersPhaseCraft Ltd,BT plc,UCL,SeeQC UK,National Physical Laboratory NPL,PASQAL,Oxford Ionics,THALES UK LIMITED,Oxford Instruments Group (UK),Oxford Quantum Circuits,Nu Quantum,Quandela SAS,IBM UNITED KINGDOM LIMITED,Bluefors Oy,Quantinuum,Universal Quantum Ltd,Keysight Technologies,Quantum Motion,ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG,Riverlane,Toshiba Europe Limited (UK),IQM,National Quantum Computing Centre,Amazon Web Services EMEA SARLFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035046/1Funder Contribution: 8,340,420 GBPThe primary objective of the QC2 CDT is to train the upcoming generation of pioneering researchers, entrepreneurs, and business leaders who will contribute to positioning the UK as a global leader in the quantum-enabled economy by 2033. The UK government and industry have demonstrated their commitment by investing £1 billion in the National Quantum Technologies Programme (NQTP) since 2014. In its March 2023 National Quantum Strategy document, the UK government reaffirmed its dedication to quantum technologies, pledging £2.5 billion in funding over the next decade. This commitment includes the establishment of the UKRI National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC). The fields of quantum computation and quantum communications are at a pivotal juncture, as the next decade will determine whether the long-anticipated technological advancements can be realized in practical, commercially-viable applications. With a wide-ranging spectrum of research group activities at UCL, the QC2 CDT is uniquely situated to offer comprehensive training across all levels of the quantum computation and quantum communications system stacks. This encompasses advanced algorithms and quantum error-correcting codes, the full range of qubit hardware platforms, quantum communications, quantum network architectures, and quantum simulation. The QC2 CDT has been co-developed through a partnership between UCL and a network of UK and international partners. This network encompasses major global technology giants such as IBM, Amazon Web Services and Toshiba, as well as leading suppliers of quantum engineering systems like Keysight, Bluefors, Oxford Instruments and Zurich Instruments. We also have end-users of quantum technologies, including BT, Thales, NPL, and NQCC, in addition to a diverse group of UK and international SMEs operating in both quantum hardware (IQM, NuQuantum, Quantum Motion, SeeQC, Pasqal, Oxford Ionics, Universal Quantum, Oxford Quantum Circuits and Quandela) and quantum software (Quantinuum, Phase Craft and River Lane). Our partners will deliver key components of the training programme. Notably, BT will deliver training in quantum comms theory and experiments, IBM will teach quantum programming, and Quantum Motion will lead a training experiment on semiconductor qubits. Furthermore, 17 of our partners will co-sponsor and co-supervise PhD projects in collaboration with UCL academics, ensuring a strong alignment between the research outcomes of the CDT and the critical research objectives of the UK quantum economy. In total the cash and in-kind contributions from our partners exceed £9.1 million, including £2.944 million cash contribution to support 46 co-sponsored PhD studentships. QC2 will provide an extensive cohort-based training programme. Our students will specialize in advanced research topics while maintaining awareness of the overarching system requirements for these technologies. Central to this programme is its commitment to interdisciplinary collaboration, which is evident in the composition of the leadership and supervisory team. This team draws expertise from various UCL departments, including Chemistry, Electronics and Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, and Physics, as well as the London Centre for Nanotechnology (LCN). QC2 will deliver transferable skills training to its students, including written and oral presentation skills, fostering an entrepreneurial mindset, and imparting techniques to maximize the impact of research outcomes. Additionally, the programme is committed to taking into consideration the broader societal implications of the research. This is achieved by promoting best practices in responsible innovation, diversity and inclusion, and environmental impact.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2029Partners:Nokia Bell Labs, Digital Catapult, Arqit Limited, Quantinuum, AegiQ +37 partnersNokia Bell Labs,Digital Catapult,Arqit Limited,Quantinuum,AegiQ,Oxford Quantum Circuits,LTIMindtree,KETS Quantum Security Ltd,Quantum Dice,Cyber Reach,Nu Quantum,Craft Prospect Ltd,Veriqloud,euNetworks Fiber UK Ltd,Alter Technology UK Ltd,nodeQ,Crypta Labs Ltd,PsiQuantum Ltd,Wideblue Ltd,ORCA Computing Ltd,Honeywell UK,Fortanix,Duality Quantum Photonics Ltd,Satellite Applications Catapult,CENSIS,National Cyber Security Centre,Heriot-Watt University,Scottish Enterprise,Bay Photonics Ltd,ID Quantique,BT plc,Angoka Limited,Chase Cryogenics,Leonardo,Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL,ETSI,Coherent Corp,Technology Scotland,Elson Space Engineering,Ciena Ltd,Quandela SAS,Toshiba Research Europe LimitedFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Z533208/1Funder Contribution: 21,272,300 GBPo achieve this vision, we will address major global research challenges towards the establishment of the "quantum internet" —?globally interlinked quantum networks which connect quantum nodes via quantum channels co-existing with classical telecom networks. These research challenges include: low-noise quantum memories with long storage time; connecting quantum processors at all distance scales; long-haul and high-rate quantum communication links; large-scale entanglement networks with agile routing capabilities compatible with - and embedded in - classical telecommunicatons networks; cost-effective scalability, standardisation, verification and certification. By delivering technologies and techniques to our industrial innovation partners, the IQN Hub will enable UK academia, national laboratories, industry, and end-users to be at the forefront of the quantum networking revolution. The Hub will utilise experience in the use of photonic entanglement for quantum key distribution (QKD) alongside state-of-the art quantum memory research from existing EPSRC Quantum Technology Hubs and other projects to form a formidable consortium tackling the identified challenges. We will research critical component technology, which will underpin the future national supply chain, and we will make steps towards global QKD and the intercontinental distribution of entanglement via satellites. This will utilise the Hub Network's in-orbit demonstrator due to be launched in late 2024, as well as collaboration with upcoming international missions. With the National Quantum Computing Centre (NQCC), we will explore applications towards quantum advantage demonstrations such as secure access to the quantum cloud, achievable only through entanglement networks. Hub partner National Physical Laboratory (NPL) working with our academic partners and the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) will ensure that our efforts are compatible with emerging quantum regulatory standards and post-quantum cybersecurity to bolster national security. We will foster synergies with competing international efforts through healthy exchange with our global partners. The Hub's strong industrial partner base will facilitate knowledge exchange and new venture creation. Achieving the IQN Hub's vision will provide a secure distributed and entanglement-enabled quantum communication infrastructure for UK end-users. Industry, government stakeholders and the public will be able to secure data in transit, in storage and in computation, exploiting unique quantum resources and functionalities. We will use a hybrid approach with existing classical cyber-security standards, including novel emerging post-quantum algorithms as well as hardware security modules. We will showcase our ambition with target use-cases that have emerged as barriers for industry, after years of investigation within the current EPSRC QT Hubs as well as other international efforts. These barriers include security and integrity of: (1) device authentication, identification, attestation, verification; (2) distributed and cloud computing; (3) detection, measurement, sensing, synchronisation. We will demonstrate novel applications as well as identify novel figures of merit (such as resilience, accuracy, sustainability, communication complexity, cost, integrity, etc.) beyond security enhancement alone to ensure the national quantum entanglement network can be fully exploited by our stakeholders and our technology can be rapidly translated into a commercial setting.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2032Partners:NCC Group, Oracle for Research, THALES UK LIMITED, Immersive Labs, University of Adelaide +21 partnersNCC Group,Oracle for Research,THALES UK LIMITED,Immersive Labs,University of Adelaide,Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL,Airbus Endeavr Wales,QinetiQ,University of Bristol,Cybsafe Limited,Carnegie Mellon University,Arqit Quantum Inc.,BT plc,ARM Ltd,Science Card,Vodafone UK Limited,Forescout,University of Leuven,TU Darmstadt,Exalens,Ofcom,LV= General Insurance,HP Labs,Royal United Services Institute,Siemens plc (UK),Think Cyber Security LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035313/1Funder Contribution: 8,266,800 GBPDigitalisation has generated a new era of technological innovations whose value can only be maximised with equally innovative cyber security. Our specific focus is on the cyber security of digitalisation and data in large-scale, intermeshed systems and infrastructures - where the boundaries between systems are blurred, data distributed with strong localisation and sovereignty claims, and there exist numerous, intricate inter-dependencies between service architectures. With the increasing shortage of cyber security professionals - both globally and in the UK - there is an urgent need for future research leaders who will have the capability to anticipate the challenges and develop innovative solutions to cyber security in a world where technology operates without concrete, clearly delineated digital boundaries. This capability is critical to ensure that digital infrastructures are secure and resilient and security professionals have suitable methods, tools, techniques and insights for securing the digital societal fabric. The Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) 'Cyber Secure Everywhere: Resilience in a World of Disappearing System Boundaries' will train at least 50 new doctoral-level graduates to address this capability gap. We will do this by educating PhD students in both the technical skills needed to study and analyse blended infrastructures, while simultaneously training them to understand the challenges as fundamentally human too. The training involves close involvement with industry and practitioners who have played a key role in co-creating the programme. The training also leverages state-of-the-art research testbeds and labs at universities of Bristol and Bath as well as partner industry organisations and international research centres. The programme builds on the best practices developed as part of our current CDT on Trust, Identity, Privacy and Security in Large-Scale Infrastructures (TIPS-at-Scale). The first year will involve a series of taught modules providing core knowledge in cyber security (both technical and human & organisational aspects). There will be a programme of co-creation activities with industry as well as deep dives on particular research topics and industry challenges. This co-creation and collaboration ethos will continue throughout their research projects. Throughout the 4-year programme, students will also receive skills training on a number of fundamental computational and analytical techniques as well as intellectual property, entrepreneurship and commercialisation. They will work collaboratively with students in-year and across-years on shared problems and explore responsible innovation in real-world contexts. Through their projects and state-of-the-art experimental infrastructures, they will develop knowledge and expertise on rigorous, evidence-based research on cyber security. The CDT is an exciting, novel way to develop future research and industry leaders who are not only able to tackle cyber security in emerging and future digital infrastructures but can do so in a way that is based on rigorous experimental work and a core ethos of responsible innovation.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2033Partners:British Telecommunications plc, University of Edinburgh, UvA, AegiQ, IQM +38 partnersBritish Telecommunications plc,University of Edinburgh,UvA,AegiQ,IQM,Xanadu,Rigetti & Co Inc,Nu Quantum,University of Copenhagen,Entropica Labs,Quantum Base Alpha,Cambridge Consultants Ltd,SICSA,University of Waterloo (Canada),Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL,Atom Computing,Google,PASQAL SAS,AWE plc,Sydney Quantum Academy,QuiX Quantum B.V.,Sorbonne University (Paris IV & UPMC),Infleqtion,Quandela SAS,PhaseCraft Ltd,Input Output Global (IOG),Quantinuum,National Quantum Computing Centre,University of Maryland,Veriqloud,Hartree Centre,Leiden University,ORCA Computing Ltd,Riverlane,UT,Alice & Bob,SandboxAQ,Algorithmiq Ltd,IonQ,SeeQC UK,National Physical Laboratory NPL,Oxford Quantum Circuits,Lawrence Berkeley National LaboratoryFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035097/1Funder Contribution: 7,824,130 GBPQuantum technology will revolutionise many aspects of life and bring enormous benefits to the economy and society. The Centre for Doctoral Training in Quantum Informatics (QI CDT) will provide advanced training in the structure, behaviour, and interaction of quantum hardware, software, and applications. The training programme spans computer sciences, mathematics, physics, and engineering, and will enable the use of quantum technology in a way that is integrable, interoperable, and impactful, rather than developing the hardware itself. The training programme targets three research challenges with a strong focus on end user impact: (i) quantum service architecture concerns how to design quantum networks and devices most usefully; (ii) scalable quantum software is about feasible application at scale of quantum technology and its integration with other software; and (iii) quantum application analysis investigates how quantum technology can be used most advantageously to solve end user problems. The QI CDT will offer 75+ PhD students an intensive 4-year training and research programme that equips them with the skills needed to tackle the research challenges of quantum informatics. This new generation will be able to integrate quantum hardware with high-performance computing, design effective quantum software, and apply this in a societally meaningful way. The QI CDT brings together a coalition with national reach including over 65 academic experts in quantum informatics from five universities - the University of Edinburgh, the University of Oxford, University College London, Heriot-Watt University, and the University of Strathclyde - and three public sector partners - the National Quantum Computing Centre, the National Physical Laboratory, and the Hartree Centre. A network of over 30 industry partners, diverse in size and domain expertise, and 9 leading international universities, give students the best basis for meaningful and collaborative research. A strong focus on cohort-based training will make QI CDT students into a diverse network of future leaders in Quantum Informatics in the UK.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2025 - 2033Partners:CENSIS, University of Strathclyde, British Telecommunications plc, Scottish Univ Physics Alliance (SUPA), RedWave Labs +26 partnersCENSIS,University of Strathclyde,British Telecommunications plc,Scottish Univ Physics Alliance (SUPA),RedWave Labs,SeeQC UK,National Physical Laboratory NPL,AWE plc,Kelvin Nanotechnology Ltd,Coherent Scotland Ltd,Riverlane,Glasgow Science Centre Ltd,Bay Photonics Ltd,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Oxford Quantum Circuits,Oxford Instruments Plasma Technology,GLOphotonics SAS,THALES UK LIMITED,Amazon Web Services EMEA SARL,Arqit Limited,STMicroelectronics,Fraunhofer UK Research Ltd,Skylark Lasers,QuiX Quantum B.V.,ZURICH INSTRUMENTS AG,Craft Prospect Ltd,M Squared Lasers Ltd,Alter Technology UK Ltd,Wideblue Ltd,MBDA UK Ltd,AegiQFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y035089/1Funder Contribution: 7,909,260 GBPQuantum Technology is based on quantum phenomena that govern physics on an atomic scale, enabling key breakthroughs that enhance the performance of classical devices and allow for entirely new applications in communications technology, imaging and sensing, and computation. Quantum networks will provide secure communication on a global scale, quantum sensors will revolutionise measurements in fields such as geology and biomedical imaging, and quantum computers will efficiently solve problems that are intractable even on the best future supercomputers. The economic and societal benefit will be decisive, impacting a wide range of industries and markets, including engineering, medicine, finance, defence, aerospace, energy and transport. Consequently, Quantum Technologies are being prioritised worldwide through large-scale national or trans-national initiatives, and a healthy national industrial Quantum Technology ecosystem has emerged including supply chain, business start-ups, and commercial end users. Our Centre for Doctoral Training in Applied Quantum Technologies (CDT-AQT) will address the national need to train cohorts of future quantum scientists and engineers for this emerging industry. The training program is a partnership between the Universities of Strathclyde, Glasgow and Heriot-Watt. In collaboration with more than 30 UK industry partners, CDT-AQT will offer advanced training in broad aspects of Quantum Technology, from technical underpinnings to applications in the three key areas of Quantum Measurement and Sensing, Quantum Computing and Simulation, and Quantum Communications. Our programme is designed to create a diverse community of responsible future leaders who will tackle scientific and engineering challenges in the emerging industrial landscape, bring innovative ideas to market, and work towards securing the UK's competitiveness in one of the most advanced and promising areas of the high-tech industry. The quality of our training provision is ensured by our supervisors' world-class research backgrounds, well-resourced research environments at the host institutions, and access to national strategic facilities. Industry engagement in co-creation and co-supervision is seen as crucial in equipping our students with the transferable skills needed to translate fundamental quantum physics into practical quantum technologies for research, industry, and society. To benefit the wider community immediately, we will make Quantum Technologies accessible to the general public through dedicated outreach activities, in which our students will showcase their research and exhibit at University Open Days, schools, science centres and science festivals.
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