Are you looking for an exciting opportunity to join a dynamic and growing team in a fast paced and challenging area? This is a unique opportunity for you to work with Global Technology Applied Research (GTAR) center at JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPMC). The goal of GTAR is to design and conduct research across multiple frontier technologies, in order to enable novel discoveries and inventions, and to inform and develop next-generation solutions for the firm’s clients and businesses.
As a quantum cryptography researcher in Global Technology Applied Research, you have solid quantum key distribution (QKD) theory background to drive quantum-safe networking innovations at JPMorgan Chase. The role will contribute to the research program of the Quantum Security and Networking team. The role is expected to collaborate with a highly interdisciplinary team, consisting of researchers and engineers from different technical disciplines, who may be located in different cities across the globe.
Job responsibilities
Advance the quantum cryptography research program at JPMC Design and develops novel quantum-safe protocols for financial use cases Contribute to intellectual property disclosures and publish in international peer-review journals Contribute to establishing JPMC’s reputation in the scientific field via publication of select results in prestigious venues Adds to team culture of diversity, equity, inclusion, and respectRequired qualifications, capabilities, and skills
Ph.D. degree in Quantum Cryptography or Quantum Information Theory Proven track record in research (e.g., publications in high-impact factor journals and active participation in leading conferences like QCRYPT) Working knowledge of semi-definite programming and numerical optimization techniquesPreferred qualifications, capabilities, and skills
Expertise in applied quantum cryptography with experience in designing loss-tolerant and device-independent quantum information protocols. Familiarity with post-quantum cryptography assumptions and their applications to quantum cryptography