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Quantum 2025 – scientific programme

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MON: Monday Contributed Sessions

MON 4: DPG Promotionskolleg Next Generation Computing

MON 4.1: Talk

Monday, September 8, 2025, 14:15–14:30, ZHG004

From Qubits to Neuromorphic Computing: Technologies Shaping the Future of Computing (Part 1) — •Jonah Elias Nitschke1, Noah Stiehm2, Sebastian Großenbach3, and Alexander Cornelius Heinrich41TU Dortmund university, Dortmund, Germany — 2TU Ilmenau, Ilmenau, Germany — 3Uni Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany — 4QuantumBW, Stuttgart, Germany

What will the future of computing look like? Which technologies will define it, and what might succeed classical digital computation?

The technological landscape is diverse and rapidly evolving, with emerging fields such as analog and neuromorphic computing, as well as quantum computing. The German Physical Society (DPG) has launched its first Graduate Program (DPG-Promotionskolleg) to provide a structured perspective on these developments.

This initiative is not only focused on a new topic but also introduces an innovative format. The DPG Graduate School is a pilot initiative designed to encourage interdisciplinary and cross-institutional collaboration among PhD students over a period of 18 months. Participants will work alongside experts from academia, industry, and consulting to address complex questions related to the future of computing. The program emphasizes collaboration across various disciplines and encourages participants to look beyond their research topics and answer questions such as: How does my research contribute to the broader development of next generation computer technology, and why is it relevant to society?

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