Quantum Without a Middle: Why India’s Materials Discovery Ambition Needs an Institutional Bridge
On April 14, 2026 — World Quantum Day — Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu inaugurated the Amaravati Quantum Reference Facilities at SRM University-AP. Two systems, Amaravati 1S and Amaravati 1Q, built in eight months by seven institutions spanning six Indian cities, with a predominantly domestic supply chain. India’s first indigenous, open-access quantum computing platforms — designed, assembled, and tested on Indian soil. It was a genuine milestone. Not hype, not a press release dressed as progress — but a real machine, cooling its processor, ready for use. And yet, the more consequential question was barely asked in the coverage that followed: connected to what, exactly? What Quantum Computing Actually Does in Materials Science Before asking what India should build around its quantum investments, it is worth being precise about what quantum computing actually contributes to materials discovery. The discourse around quantum tends toward either breathless optimism...