The network of QT Hubs has been awarded funding to host the school by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, part of UK Research & Innovation.
The 10-day residential event, held at the University of Birmingham, will train 60 of the UK’s and Canada’s most promising early career quantum researchers. The aim is to create opportunities for increased mobility, giving students an international perspective and providing an enhanced talent pipeline for UK academia and industry.
Both countries have identified quantum as a key emerging technology and have invested heavily in this area. At the same time, both skills and training and international engagement are expected to feature at the core of the forthcoming, newest iteration of the UK’s national quantum strategy, expected to be published by BEIS in early 2023.
Quantum technologies rely on properties of quantum mechanics. As such, they work in fundamentally different ways to those underpinned by classical physics, offering superior performance and enhanced functionality.
Since 2013, the UK has invested over £1B in a national quantum technologies programme bringing academia and industry together to facilitate the commercialisation of these emerging technologies, creating new markets and reaping wide societal benefits.
The network of four QT Hubs is part of this investment. The Hubs are large, multi-partner consortia focusing on advancing research and technology development in the areas of: quantum sensors and timing (led by the University of Birmingham); quantum enhanced imaging (QuantIC – led by the University of Glasgow); quantum computing and simulation (led by the University of Oxford); and quantum secure communications (led by the University of York).
The Hubs have partnered with research institutions across Canada to secure funding for the summer school.