Biography:John M. Martinis: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
| name = John M. Martinis | | name = John M. Martinis | ||
| image = John M. Martinis.jpg | |||
| caption = John M. Martinis | |||
| fields = Physics | | fields = Physics | ||
| known_for = John Matthew Martinis (born 1958) is an American physicist and professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. | | known_for = John Matthew Martinis (born 1958) is an American physicist and professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. | ||
Revision as of 20:37, 24 May 2026
| John M. Martinis | |
|---|---|
| John M. Martinis
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| Fields | Physics |
| Known for | John Matthew Martinis (born 1958) is an American physicist and professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. |
John M. Martinis is a biographical subject in the ScholarlyWiki science collection. John Matthew Martinis (born 1958) is an American physicist and professor of physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He led a team to develop a superconducting quantum computer at the Quantum AI Lab.[1]
Work and context
With the Sycamore processor, the team claimed the first evidence of quantum supremacy in 2019. He shared the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics with John Clarke and Michel Devoret for joint work on macroscopic quantum phenomena in superconductors.
This local Biography page supports internal ScholarlyWiki links and keeps the related science pages from pointing to a missing biography target.
References
External links
Author: Harold Foppele
Source attribution: Biography:John M. Martinis