

Every year, APS Global Physics Summit brings together scientific community members from around the world across all disciplines of physics.
Join Quantinuum at this year’s conference, taking place in our backyard, Denver, Colorado, from March 15th – 20th, where we will showcase how our quantum hardware, software, and partnerships are helping define the next era of high-performance and quantum computing.
Find our team at booth #1020 and join our sessions below to discover how we’re advancing quantum technologies and building the bridge between HPC and quantum.
Programmable quantum matter at the frontier of classical computation
Speaker: Andrew Potter
Time: 10:12 – 10:48 am
Benchmarking a 98-qubit trapped-ion quantum computer
Speaker: Charles Baldwin
Time: 12:36 – 12:48 pm
High-Fidelity Quantum operations in the Helios Barium-Ion Processor
Speaker: Anthony Ransford
Time: 4:18 – 4:30 pm
Generative AI Model for Quantum State Preparation
Speaker: Jem Guhit
Time: 4:42 – 4:54 pm
Quantum digital simulations of holographic models using Quantinuum Systems
Speaker: Enrico Rinaldi
Time: 5:54 – 6:30 pm
Software-Enabled Innovations that Drive Robust Commercial Operation on Quantinuum Helios
Speaker: Caroline Figgatt
Time: 8:00 – 8:12 am
Improving Clock Speed in the Quantinuum Helios Quantum Computer
Speaker: Adam Reed
Time: 8:12 – 8:24 am
Less Quantum, More Advantage: An End-to-End Quantum Algorithm for the Jones Polynomial
Speaker: Konstantinos Meichanetzidis
Time: 8:48 – 9:00 am
Quantum Operation Pipelining in the Quantinuum Helios Processor
Speaker: Colin Kennedy
Time: 9:00 - 9:12 am
Directly estimating the fidelity of measurement-based quantum computation
Speaker: David Stephen
Time: 9:12 - 9:24 am
Logical algorithms in a quantum error-detecting code on a trapped-ion quantum processor
Speaker: Matthew DeCross
Time: 9:36 - 9:48 am
Separate and efficient characterization of SPAM errors in the presence of leakage
Speaker: Leigh Norris
Time: 10:00 - 10:12 am
Logical benchmarking on a trapped-ion quantum processor
Speaker: Andrew Guo
Time: 12:00 - 12:12 pm
Modelling Actinides Chemistry with Trapped Ion Quantum Computers
Speaker: Carlo Alberto Gaggioli
Time: 3:30 - 3:42 pm
Digital quantum magnetism at the frontier of classical simulation
Speaker: Michael Foss-Feig
Time: 8:36 - 9:12 am
Shorter width truncated Taylor series for Hamiltonian dynamics simulations
Speaker: Michelle Wynne Sze
Time: 9:24 - 9:36 am
Quantum-Accelerated DFT+DMFT for Correlated Subspaces in Hemoglobin
Speaker: Juan Pedersen
Time: 9:48 - 10:00 am
Simple logical quantum computation with concatenated symplectic double codes
Speaker: Noah Berthusen
Time: 12:48 - 1:00 pm
When is enough enough? Efficient estimation of quantum properties by stopping early
Speaker: Oliver Hart
Time: 12:48 - 1:00 pm
High-Level Programming of the Quantinuum Helios Processor
Speaker: John Campora
Time: 1:48 - 2:24 pm
Error detection without post-selection in adaptive quantum circuits
Speaker: Eli Chertkov
Time: 4:42 - 4:54 pm
Below Threshold Logical Quantum Computation at Quantinuum
Speaker: Shival Dasu
Time: 8:00 - 8:36 am
Performing optimal phase measurements with a universal quantum processor
Speaker: Ross Hutson
Time: 8:36 - 8:48 am
Benchmarking with leakage heralded measurements on the Quantinuum Helios processor
Speaker: Victor Colussi
Time: 10:00 am
High-throughput bidirectional microwave-to-optical transduction assessed with a practical quantum capacity
Speaker: Maxwell Urmey
Time: 12:00 - 12:36 pm
Fast quantum state preparation via AI-based Graph Decimation
Speaker: Matteo Puviani
Time: 5:54 - 6:06 pm
2D Tensor Network Methods for Simulation of Spin Models on Quantum Computers
Speaker: Reza Haghshenas
Time: 8:36 - 8:48 am
High-Performance Computing Simulations for Optical Multidimensional Coherent Spectroscopy Studies of Strained Silicon-Vacancy Centers in Diamond
Speaker: Imran Bashir
Time: 10:36 - 10:48 am
High-Performance Statevector Simulation for TKET and Selene with NVIDIA cuStateVec
Speaker: Fabian Finger
Time: 12:36 - 12:48 pm
Part 1: Logic gates on High-rate Quantum LDPC codes using ion trap devices
Speaker: Elijah Durso-Sabina
Time: 12:48 - 1:00 pm
Driving Quantum Computing Forward: QEC, Hardware, and Applications with Quantinuum
Speaker: Natalie Brown
Time: 1:12 - 1:48 pm
A new QCCD computer and new applications
Speaker: Anthony Ransford
Time: 2:24 - 3:00 pm
*All times in MT
Quantinuum, the world’s largest integrated quantum company, pioneers powerful quantum computers and advanced software solutions. Quantinuum’s technology drives breakthroughs in materials discovery, cybersecurity, and next-gen quantum AI. With over 500 employees, including 370+ scientists and engineers, Quantinuum leads the quantum computing revolution across continents.
Progress in quantum computing is measured by hardware advances plus the algorithms and quantum error-correction codes that turn quantum systems into useful computational tools.
Thanks to recent hardware advances, researchers are increasingly sharpening their tools to probe the performance of quantum algorithms and understand how they behave in realistic conditions – where stability, system architecture and algorithm design all shape performance.
A new Denmark-based collaboration between the University of Southern Denmark (SDU), Quantinuum, and the Danish e-Infrastructure Consortium (DeiC) will utilize Quantinuum Helios. Researchers at the SDU’s Centre for Quantum Mathematics, led by Jørgen Ellegaard Andersen, will use Helios to pursue research into topological quantum computing.
Their work could help explain how and why successful quantum algorithms perform as they do, informing the development of high-performance algorithms suited to emerging quantum systems. They’re exploring the scientific foundations that support future quantum applications across areas including pharmaceuticals, finance, and defense.
“We are thrilled to gain access to Quantinuum’s high-fidelity Helios system. This collaboration gives us a unique opportunity to test the limits of our algorithms and evaluate system performance, while advancing fundamental research and laying the foundation for future applications.”
— Professor Jørgen Ellegaard Andersen, Director of the Centre for Quantum Mathematics at University of Southern Denmark
Topological quantum computing is an area of research that connects quantum computation with deep mathematical structures. It includes the study of error correcting codes known as surface codes that encode quantum information in the global properties of systems of logical qubits.
The research team will explore how these codes behave, and how they may support the development of fault-tolerant quantum algorithms in practical implementations under realistic conditions.
This distinction between theory and practical implementation matters. In theory, topological approaches offer a rich framework for designing algorithms and error-correcting codes. In practice, researchers need to understand how those ideas perform when implemented on real systems, where questions of noise, stability, overhead, and scaling become central. The collaboration will allow the SDU team to investigate these questions directly.
Beyond individual algorithms and codes, the research will also develop tools for benchmarking quantum processors. The goal is to develop new ways to characterize fidelity and stability in regimes that can be difficult to access.
The team will also explore hybrid quantum–classical approaches, including machine-learning techniques assisted by quantum hardware, to study the mathematical structures at the heart of topological quantum computing. This work reflects a broader field of research in which quantum and classical methods are used together, each contributing to parts of a computational problem.
The collaboration reflects the growing role of national quantum infrastructure in supporting research and talent development. Denmark has a long tradition of scientific innovation, and this collaboration is intended to support the country’s continued development in quantum technology.
The initiative is supported by DeiC, which played a central role in securing funding and enabling access to Quantinuum’s systems. DeiC has been assigned a particular role in developing and coordinating quantum infrastructure initiatives for the benefit of universities and industry, operating without its own commercial, sectoral, or geographical interests. This includes securing dedicated access to quantum computers, producing advisory services and supporting the development of new talent in the Danish quantum sector.
“DeiC’s special effort to secure funding and access for this research initiative is rooted in our organization’s role in relation to the Danish Government’s strategy for quantum technology.”
— Henrik Navntoft Sønderskov, Head of Quantum at Danish e-Infrastructure Consortium
This collaboration promises to accelerate the development of practical algorithms. It is grounded in fundamental science – but its focus is practical: discovering and testing mathematical approaches to topological quantum computing that can be implemented, evaluated, and improved on real quantum hardware.
That work requires both theoretical insight and access to a system such as Helios capable of supporting meaningful scientific work.

This month, Quantinuum welcomed its global user community to the first-ever Q-Net Connect, an annual forum designed to spark collaboration, share insights, and accelerate innovation across our full-stack quantum computing platforms. Over two days, users came together not only to learn from one another, but to build the relationships and momentum that we believe will help define the next chapter of quantum computing.
Q-Net Connect 2026 drew over 170 attendees from around the world to Denver, Colorado, including representatives from commercial enterprises and startups, academia and research institutions, and the public sector and non-profits - all users of Quantinuum systems.
The program was packed with inspiring keynotes, technical tracks, and customer presentations. Attendees heard from leaders at Quantinuum, as well as our partners at NVIDIA, JPMorganChase and BlueQubit; professors from the University of New Mexico, the University of Nottingham and Harvard University; national labs, including NIST, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories and Los Alamos National Laboratory; and other distinguished guests from across the global quantum ecosystem.
The mission of the Quantinuum Q-Net user community is to create a space for shared learning, collaboration and connection for those who adopt Quantinuum’s hardware, software and middleware platform. At this year’s Q-Net Connect, we awarded four organizations who made notable efforts to champion this effort.
Congratulations, again, and thank you to everyone who contributed to the success of the first Q-Net Connect!
Q-Net offers year‑round support through user access, developer tools, documentation, trainings, webinars, and events. Members enjoy many exclusive benefits, including being the first to hear about exclusive content, publications and promotional offers.
By joining the community, you will be invited to exclusive gatherings to hear about the latest breakthroughs and connect with industry experts driving quantum innovation. Members also get access to Q‑Net Connect recordings and stay connected for future community updates.

In a follow-up to our recent work with Hiverge using AI to discover algorithms for quantum chemistry, we’ve teamed up with Hiverge, Amazon Web Services (AWS) and NVIDIA to explore using AI to improve algorithms for combinatorial optimization.
With the rapid rise of Large Language Models (LLMs), people started asking “what if AI agents can serve as on-demand algorithm factories?” We have been working with Hiverge, an algorithm discovery company, AWS, and NVIDIA, to explore how LLMs can accelerate quantum computing research.
Hiverge – named for Hive, an AI that can develop algorithms – aims to make quantum algorithm design more accessible to researchers by translating high-level problem descriptions in mostly natural language into executable quantum circuits. The Hive takes the researcher’s initial sketch of an algorithm, as well as special constraints the researcher enumerates, and evolves it to a new algorithm that better meets the researcher’s needs. The output is expressed in terms of a familiar programming language, like Guppy or NVIDIA CUDA-Q, making it particularly easy to implement.
The AI is called a “Hive” because it is a collective of LLM agents, all of whom are editing the same codebase. In this work, the Hive was made up of LLM powerhouses such as Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude, Llama, as well as NVIDIA Nemotron, which was accessed through AWS’ Amazon Bedrock service. Many models are included because researchers know that diversity is a strength – just like a team of human researchers working in a group, a variety of perspectives often leads to the strongest result.
Once the LLMs are assembled, the Hive calls on them to do the work writing the desired algorithm; no new training is required. The algorithms are then executed and their ‘fitness’ (how well they solve the problem) is measured. Unfit programs do not survive, while the fittest ones evolve to the next generation. This process repeats, much like the evolutionary process of nature itself.
After evolution, the fittest algorithm is selected by the researchers and tested on other instances of the problem. This is a crucial step as the researchers want to understand how well it can generalize.
In this most recent work, the joint team explored how AI can assist in the discovery of heuristic quantum optimization algorithms, a class of algorithms aimed at improving efficiency across critical workstreams. These span challenges like optimal power grid dispatch and storage placement, arranging fuel inside nuclear reactors, and molecular design and reaction pathway optimization in drug, material, and chemical discovery—where solutions could translate into maximizing operational efficiency, dramatic reduction in costs, and rapid acceleration in innovation.

In other AI approaches, such as reinforcement learning, models are trained to solve a problem, but the resulting "algorithm" is effectively ‘hidden’ within a neural network. Here, the algorithm is written in Guppy or CUDA-Q (or Python), making it human-interpretable and easier to deploy on new problem instances.
This work leveraged the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform, running on powerful NVIDIA GPUs made accessible by AWS. It’s state-of-the art accelerated computing was crucial; the research explored highly complex problems, challenges that lie at the edge of classical computing capacity. Before running anything on Quantinuum’s quantum computer, the researchers first used NVIDIA accelerated computing to simulate the quantum algorithms and assess their fitness. Once a promising algorithm is discovered, it could then be deployed on quantum hardware, creating an exciting new approach for scaling quantum algorithm design.
More broadly, this work points to one of many ways in which classical compute, AI, and quantum computing are most powerful in symbiosis. AI can be used to improve quantum, as demonstrated here, just as quantum can be used to extend AI. Looking ahead, we envision AI evolving programs that express a combination of algorithmic primitives, much like human mathematicians, such as Peter Shor and Lov Grover, have done. After all, both humans and AI can learn from each other.