Harmoniqs
analog intelligence
About Us
Harmoniqs is a quantum software company building the industry-standard interface for simulation, control, and calibration across all qubit types. We develop unified software for simulation, calibration, and real time control across qubit architectures. By integrating AI and robotic automation, we help quantum hardware teams operate systems more intelligently, efficiently, and at scale.
Our Team

Aaron Trowbridge is the CEO of Harmoniqs, leading the development of quantum control and calibration software. He is a physicist and software engineer, formerly a researcher at Carnegie Mellon University, where his award-winning work in quantum optimal control laid the foundation for Harmoniqs.

Jack Champagne is the CTO of Harmoniqs, leading software architecture and high-performance computing efforts. He holds degrees in Computer Science and Mathematics from UMass Amherst and a Master’s in Software Engineering from Carnegie Mellon, and brings nearly six years of experience translating advanced research into working software for teams. Bringing the best quantum control software into production-ready systems is the fiber of his being.

Gennadi Ryan is the Founding Engineer of Harmoniqs. With a background at the intersection of machine learning and systems programming, he holds nearly six years of experience taking ideas in the research sphere and bringing them to life through software. He holds degrees in Computer Science and Mathematics from the University of Pittsburgh, and has a multifacted background applying machine learning and high-performance computing to concrete problems in the scientific domain.
Board & Advisors

Prof. Zac Manchester is a Professor of Aerospace at MIT specializing in robotics, optimal control, and computational methods for advanced robotic systems.

David Schuster is a Professor of Applied Physics at Stanford University. Schuster specializes in quantum information, with research efforts in quantum computing, hybrid quantum systems, and quantum simulation.

Andy has a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Washington, Seattle. His doctoral work, funded by an NSF Quantum Network Fellowship, focused on applying A.I. to model and control quantum systems. He is now an Intelligence Community Postdoctoral Fellow working on quantum computing and control in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Chicago. Andy was previously employed as a software developer modeling complex industrial systems, and worked as a graduate student researcher in a genetics lab. He holds a BS in Mathematics and Physics from The Ohio State University.

Kenneth Richard is a Special Counsel at Bartko Pavia LLP and practices in the Litigation and Intellectual Property Practice Groups. He has had an extensive career in the technology sector, which includes running three of his own startups, helping to establish an Israeli startup in the United States, and working as a global executive at two Fortune 50 companies. Ken is fluent in Spanish and has conducted business throughout Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.As an intellectual property and antitrust litigator, Ken’s expertise in business expansion, mergers and acquisitions, and negotiations has laid a strong foundation for his current focus on antitrust law.
Help define the control layer of quantum computing
If you care about precision, performance, and building tools that matter, we want to hear from you.

