Yasunari Suzuki is a Tokyo-based team leader and researcher with 12 years of experience at the intersection of quantum physics, computer science, and quantum information, currently leading quantum computing R&D at RIKEN. He combines deep academic training (PhD from The University of Tokyo) with industry roles at NTT and advisory work for Japan’s IPA, focusing on fault-tolerant quantum architectures and automated control for superconducting qubits. A hands-on developer as well as a theorist, he contributes code and tests to prominent open-source projects like Qulacs, reflecting practical expertise in variational quantum circuit simulation and backend QA. His track record spans academia and industry—visiting roles at MIT and The University of Tokyo, JST PRESTO research, and teaching fault-tolerant quantum computing—demonstrating an ability to translate cutting-edge research into reliable software and systems. Notably, he blends low-level simulator contributions with system-level fault-tolerance design, making him effective at bridging implementation details and long-term quantum computing reliability.
Variational Quantum Circuit Simulator for Quantum Computation Research
Role in this project:
Backend Developer & QA Engineer
Contributions:38 commits, 1 comment in 1 year 6 months
Contributions summary:Yasunari contributed to the project by formatting code and resolving code differences within the `gate.hpp`, `stat_ops_dm.cpp`, `cppsim_wrapper.cpp`, and `state_dm.cpp` files. Additionally, the user added tests to `test_qulacs.py` which indicates the implementation of unit tests to ensure the quality of the code.
Contributions:17 pushes, 1 branch in 4 years 8 months
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