rohit
Rohit Sarma Sarkar
Postdoc Researcher
Rohit works with the Quantum Group at N3Cat, where his research keeps him busy with mathematics and quantum computing. When he is not proving theorems or building quantum circuits, he is usually playing video games, reading comic books or exploring new places.

Dr. Rohit Sarma Sarkar is the Director of Research in the Quantum Group at N3Cat. His research spans mathematics, physics, and theoretical computer science, with a focus on quantum machine learning, quantum circuit synthesis, variational quantum algorithms, and linear algebra. His work has applications in Hamiltonian simulation, quantum circuit design, graph optimization, and secure quantum communication, bridging foundational theory with practical implementation. He has published in leading mathematics and physics journals and presented at major quantum computing conferences.

Dr. Sarma Sarkar earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur under the prestigious Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship, where his doctoral research focused on scalable quantum circuit representations of unitary matrices. He subsequently worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR), focusing on quantum algorithms, query complexity, and quantum key distribution protocols. Outside of his professional work, he enjoys writing, reading comic books, traveling, and video gaming.

Link for publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=rObI6cEAAAAJ&hl=en

Rohit works with the Quantum Group at N3Cat, where his research keeps him busy with mathematics and quantum computing. When he is not proving theorems or building quantum circuits, he is usually playing video games, reading comic books or exploring new places.

Dr. Rohit Sarma Sarkar is the Director of Research in the Quantum Group at N3Cat. His research spans mathematics, physics, and theoretical computer science, with a focus on quantum machine learning, quantum circuit synthesis, variational quantum algorithms, and linear algebra. His work has applications in Hamiltonian simulation, quantum circuit design, graph optimization, and secure quantum communication, bridging foundational theory with practical implementation. He has published in leading mathematics and physics journals and presented at major quantum computing conferences.

Dr. Sarma Sarkar earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur under the prestigious Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship, where his doctoral research focused on scalable quantum circuit representations of unitary matrices. He subsequently worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR), focusing on quantum algorithms, query complexity, and quantum key distribution protocols. Outside of his professional work, he enjoys writing, reading comic books, traveling, and video gaming.

Link for publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=rObI6cEAAAAJ&hl=en

Rohit works with the Quantum Group at N3Cat, where his research keeps him busy with mathematics and quantum computing. When he is not proving theorems or building quantum circuits, he is usually playing video games, reading comic books or exploring new places.

Dr. Rohit Sarma Sarkar is the Director of Research in the Quantum Group at N3Cat. His research spans mathematics, physics, and theoretical computer science, with a focus on quantum machine learning, quantum circuit synthesis, variational quantum algorithms, and linear algebra. His work has applications in Hamiltonian simulation, quantum circuit design, graph optimization, and secure quantum communication, bridging foundational theory with practical implementation. He has published in leading mathematics and physics journals and presented at major quantum computing conferences.

Dr. Sarma Sarkar earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur under the prestigious Prime Minister’s Research Fellowship, where his doctoral research focused on scalable quantum circuit representations of unitary matrices. He subsequently worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR), focusing on quantum algorithms, query complexity, and quantum key distribution protocols. Outside of his professional work, he enjoys writing, reading comic books, traveling, and video gaming.

Link for publications: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=rObI6cEAAAAJ&hl=en