Research Scientist, Optical Engineering Neutral Atoms, Quantum AI

Google Google · Big Tech · Boulder, CO +1

Research Scientist role focused on optical engineering for quantum computing, involving design, testing, and evaluation of optical systems for neutral atom manipulation. The role emphasizes fundamental research, contributing to the quantum computing roadmap, and publishing findings in the scientific community. While it mentions machine learning and intelligent systems in the broader Google Research context, the core responsibilities are in optics and quantum physics, not direct AI/ML model development.

What you'd actually do

  1. Design and test optical systems to enable precise neutral atom manipulation and addressing capabilities.
  2. Evaluate and mitigate risks associated with relevant emerging optical technologies.
  3. Establish rigorous methodologies for the characterization of optical performance and system tolerancing across various modules.
  4. Engineer modular optical systems to support effective scaling of quantum systems.
  5. Contribute to the scientific community through the publication and formal dissemination of research outcomes.

Skills

Required

  • PhD in Optics, Physics, Electrical Engineering, or equivalent practical experience
  • Experience in the design, implementation, and characterization of optical systems
  • Scientific contributions, including publications in peer-reviewed journals or presentations at quantum technology conferences

Nice to have

  • Experience in the use of industry-standard optical and mechanical design software
  • Knowledge of fourier optics principles
  • Ability to collaborate effectively with hardware engineering teams on heterogeneous system integration

What the JD emphasized

  • PhD in Optics, Physics, Electrical Engineering, or equivalent practical experience.
  • Experience in the design, implementation, and characterization of optical systems.
  • One or more scientific contributions, including publications in peer-reviewed journals or presentations at quantum technology conferences.