Stanford Quantum Computing Association Our goal is to prepare the community in the field of quantum computing We will educate the community by hosting workshops, visits to local companies and discussions with professors
What weve done — Stanford Quantum The Stanford Quantum Computing Association, along with SystemX partnered with the CS210 course (Software Project Experience with Corporate Partners) at Stanford to bring a quantum computing project, sponsored by IBM, to the course
Course Pathways — Stanford Quantum Below is a list of 3 potential tracks in quantum computing that you can pursue at Stanford These are not formal course tracks, they are merely outlines to guide students based on interest
Resources — Stanford Quantum Below is a list of courses related to quantum computing Note that some of these classes are offered biennially, so whoever is interested in specific classes will have to contact the faculty listed to plan ahead or browse the Stanford class navigator
The Association — Stanford Quantum The Stanford Quantum Computing Association is the first and only student organization at Stanford dedicated to quantum computing We aim to promote quantum computing literacy and research within the Stanford community and beyond
Events — Stanford Quantum The first hour will be a presentation from our SQCA team covering basics of quantum computing (from linear algebra fundamentals to core physics concepts to basic quantum algorithms), applications of quantum computing, and the current progress frontier research
Quantum Coalition Hackathon — Stanford Quantum Learn below about previous and future Quantum Computing Hackathons Stanford is involved If you are interested in designing future Quantum Computing hackathons, join the Stanford Hackathon Team today!
SQCA Fall Fest — Stanford Quantum The first hour will be a presentation from our SQCA team covering basics of quantum computing (from linear algebra fundamentals to core physics concepts to basic quantum algorithms), applications of quantum computing, and the current progress frontier research
TensorNetwork — Stanford Quantum Tensor networks are useful for quantum computing, machine learning, and other fields During the tutorial, you can learn about them and how to use Google X's open-source library called TensorNetwork