Post by Scott Jacobsen
Publisher & Editor-in-Chief | Journalist & Long-Form Interviewer | Human Rights, Secularism, Science & Policy | In-Sight Publishing (ISBN 978-1-0692343) | Thousands of Articles Published
Joydip Ghosh is a quantum computing specialist and entrepreneur. He is co-founder and CEO of Owlyard. He is a Staff Transformational Physicist at Northrop Grumman (Transformational Computing) and is listed as a verified researcher with an owlyard.c om email. At Ford Research & Advanced Engineering, he served as a quantum-computing technical specialist and project lead, working on applications such as vehicle-route optimization. His public academic and professional profiles describe work on quantum computation, algorithms, control, simulation, and quantum machine learning, connecting research, industry use-cases, and science education. He publishes and speaks on quantum technologies, emphasizing translation of foundational physics into methods. With Scott Douglas Jacobsen, Joydip Ghosh traces the earliest “instantiations” of quantum theory to stubborn mismatches between classical physics and experimental facts. He notes that, even with early atomic ideas like Dalton’s, wildly different material properties (such as conductivity) raised the question of what atoms are really doing internally. After the 1850s, spectroscopy sharpened the mystery: heated gases produced discrete spectral lines with simple algebraic patterns that classical theory could not explain. Ghosh then highlights Planck’s 1900 solution to blackbody radiation—energy exchanged in quanta—to avert the ultraviolet catastrophe. Bohr extended quantization to atomic orbits and jumps, before Heisenberg and Schrödinger (1925–26) established modern quantum mechanics. https://lnkd.in/d5ZkTmqz