Quantum Breakthrough: Real-Time Qubit Fluctuations Tracking | AcademicJobs
A new study enables real-time tracking of qubit fluctuations 100x faster, boosting quantum computing scalability. U.S. universities like MIT and Princeton lead advances.

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Fabrizio Berritta is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the Research Laboratory of Electronics, affiliated with the Engineering Quantum Systems group. He holds a Ph.D. in condensed matter physics from the Niels Bohr Institute at the University of Copenhagen, where his doctoral research was supervised by Prof. Ferdinand Kuemmeth and Assoc. Prof. Anasua Chatterjee. Following completion of his Ph.D., Berritta undertook a one-year postdoctoral position in the group of Assoc. Prof. Morten Kjaergaard. During his doctoral studies, he experimentally demonstrated the use of low-latency control hardware and Bayesian inference techniques to mitigate environmental magnetic and electrical noise affecting semiconductor-spin and superconducting qubits. Berritta first joined the Engineering Quantum Systems group at MIT in 2024 as part of a Ph.D. exchange and returned in 2025 as a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow. In his current role, he focuses on adaptive quantum error correction and calibration techniques.
A new study enables real-time tracking of qubit fluctuations 100x faster, boosting quantum computing scalability. U.S. universities like MIT and Princeton lead advances.