IBM Quantum System One Debuts at Clinic, Joint Research on Horizon

Regional āFounding Quantum Membersā including 51ĀŅĀ× will undertake joint interdisciplinary research and education on campus and also with the Cleveland Clinic
Quantum Computing is at the top of buzzworthy phrases bandied about in technology circles. This rapidly emerging technology yokes the laws of quantum mechanics to solve problems deemed ātoo complexā for traditional computers. Now we have one of these miraculous machines in our own backyard.
IBM deployed The IBM Quantum System Oneāāon Monday, March 20 at the Cleveland Clinic. , with the goal of accelerating biomedical discoveries and research through āhigh-performance computing, artificial intelligence and quantum computing.ā
Rest assured, āactively engaging, leveraging and steering research and education of this technology in our own backyard and building community partnerships around a future thatās here today.
51ĀŅĀ× is one of three āFounding Quantum Membersā in the region (joining Case Western Reserve University and Kent State University) participating in the joint research and education across disciplines on campus and also with the Clinic.
This represents both a watershed moment for the city, region and state and also an exciting time for 51ĀŅĀ×, which has been , creating greater collaboration with regional partners and forging interdisciplinary alliances at 51ĀŅĀ× in the process:
- 51ĀŅĀ× recently received two National Science Foundation (NSF) and one New America Public Interest Technology University Network (PIT-UN) grant on Quantum Computing. The Principal Investigators of the three grants are: Hiram Lopez (Math), Sathish Kumar (EECS) and Charles McElroy (Business). The PIT-UN grant is arranged through 51ĀŅĀ× T.E.C.H. Hub (Shilpa Kedar);
- 51ĀŅĀ× also offered a Quantum Summer Camp āQubit by Qubit, CSforCLEā for high school students during Summer 2022 (Chelsey Cook Kohn, Debbie Jackson) developing community partnerships to foster a diverse tech talent pipeline;
- And lastly, though certainly not least, 51ĀŅĀ× is in the readying stages of rolling out a joint 51ĀŅĀ×-Cleveland Clinic Ph.D. program in Engineering with Applied Data Science specialization.
Needless to say, itās an exciting time for everyone involved. The only thing thatās missing? You.
Quantum Computing Curriculum at 51ĀŅĀ×
With the support from the JobsOhio project (Joanne Belovich), 51ĀŅĀ× began offering a Quantum Computing course for the first time during the Fall 2022 Semester. It was team-taught by 51ĀŅĀ× faculty membersāHiram Lopez (Math), Janche Sang (EECS), and Mehdi Rahmati (EECS).
Next year, the University plans to offer Quantum Machine Learning, Quantum Computing for Life Science, and Quantum Information Science in addition to Quantum Computing courseāwith a near-future plan to introduce a Quantum Certificate Program. Classes are scheduled on Fridays to welcome students across campus as well as a continuing education. See details .
Explore the Quantum World: Cleveland Educator Workshop
As if these successes with an eye on the future werenāt enough, 51ĀŅĀ× is also offering a first-of-its-kind professional development workshop in partnership with the Cleveland Clinic. High school and undergraduate teachers and faculty will learn how to introduce their students to quantum computing.
During the pilot programāfunded by the PIT-UN award under the āThe PIT Quantum Computing Training Pipelineā project collaborationāregistrants will learn the basics of quantum computing, engage in hands-on activities, and develop lesson plans and activities they can use with their students.
Theyāll also join a cohort of fellow teachers excited to introduce emerging technologies and quantum computing to their students. The rolling application for this program has a priority deadline of May 1, 2023. Register now at the .
Photo courtesy of IBM and the Cleveland Clinic