ARVADA, Colo. — Colorado School of Mines students and graduates are working to fill a gap in the quantum market.

What started as an idea on campus to make a quantum amplifier has now turned into a Colorado-based start-up called Bifrost Electronics.

"The amplifier, our chip that we're building, is about a centimeter by a centimeter — it's a tiny little thing — but what this thing does is enables us to take signals from one area to another without distorting them, and it's a critical component," Logan Pauli, chief technology officer at Bifrost Electronics, explained. "Quantum computing cannot run without these components."

Pauli is originally from Michigan and moved to Colorado for the School of Mines' quantum engineering program , which started in 2020. He said the idea for the quantum

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