IBM Fellow and Quantum Pioneer Charles H. Bennett Receives A.M. Turing Award, Computing's Highest Honor
Charles H. Bennett helped pioneer the foundations of quantum information science alongside co-laureateGilles Brassard of Université deMontréal .- Bennett's more than five decades at IBM Research helped transform quantum theory into practical advances like quantum cryptography, teleportation, and entanglement-based protocols.
- He is the seventh IBM awardee recognized by ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, with the A.M. Turing Award.
- The recognition joins IBM's long legacy of shaping quantum computing and the enduring impact of researchers who defined the field.
IBM)" alt="Charles H. Bennett, a research scientist and IBM Fellow, has been named a co-recipient of the 2025 A.M. Turing Award by the Association for Computing Machinery. (Credit: IBM)" />
Described by the ACM as the "Nobel Prize in computing," the award cites Bennett for contributions that helped spark a "quantum revolution," establish the field of quantum information science and reshape how researchers think about computation, communication and the nature of information itself. He shares the award with longtime collaborator
Over a career at IBM Research spanning more than five decades, Bennett pioneered explorations of how the unusual behavior of matter at the smallest scales can be harnessed to process and transmit information in ways impossible for classical computers. His efforts helped lay the scientific groundwork for quantum cryptography, quantum teleportation and entanglement distillation — all concepts that underpin modern quantum information science and ongoing advances in quantum computing today.
Born to
Bennett's curiosity drove him to explore the interplay between computation and the laws of physics as a graduate student at Harvard University, where he developed two pivotal professional relationships that helped shape the questions that would define Bennett's career.
The first was with research physicist
"
At IBM, Bennett wrote a landmark 1973 paper on logical reversibility of computation, showing that computation need not be fundamentally tied to energy dissipation in the way many had assumed. That work helped establish information as a physical concept and set the stage for decades of breakthroughs in computing to come.
"IBM was an ideal place to do this kind of research because you had people working on the fundamental physics of computing and hardware, and in the same building people focused on the mathematics of computing. I could wander down the hall and talk to many people about fundamental ideas and in fields that, at that time, scarcely overlapped," Bennett said. "That environment made it possible to grow the field of quantum information science into what it is today."
Bennett and Brassard met at a 1979 computer science conference in
Bennett also helped quantum information science leap from on-paper conjectures into real-world experimentation. Bennett and then-summer student
Today, the field Bennett helped establish has moved from foundational theory into increasingly powerful real-world systems and head-turning scientific results.
"Charlie is an inspiration to all of us. When many researchers saw quantum mechanics as a problem to solve for shrinking electronic components rather than a tool to be developed, he recognized the same physics could become a powerful new way to process and transmit information," said
Most recently, IBM unveiled an open, easy-to-integrate quantum-centric supercomputing architecture designed to scale quantum systems alongside classical computing resources, helping solve problems that classical methods alone struggle to address. The company also debuted a credible path to build IBM Quantum Starling, which it expects to be the world's first large-scale, fault-tolerant quantum computer, and deliver it to customers in 2029.
ACM's award is named after Alan M. Turing, the British mathematician who articulated the mathematical foundations of computing. The 2025 award is the organization's first associated with quantum research and Bennett, who plans to donate part of his portion of a USD
Previous IBM-associated Turing Award recipients include
To learn more, watch a short video and read a blog post about Bennett and the work that led to the award.
About IBM
IBM is a leading global hybrid cloud and AI, and business services provider, helping clients in more than 175 countries capitalize on insights from their data, streamline business processes, reduce costs and gain the competitive edge in their industries. Thousands of governments and corporate entities in critical infrastructure areas such as financial services, telecommunications and healthcare rely on IBM's hybrid cloud platform and Red Hat OpenShift to effect their digital transformations quickly, efficiently and securely. IBM's breakthrough innovations in AI, quantum computing, industry-specific cloud solutions and business services deliver open and flexible options to our clients. All of this is backed by IBM's legendary commitment to trust, transparency, responsibility, inclusivity and service.
For more information, visit https://research.ibm.com.
Media Contact:
IBM Communications
[email protected]
IBM Communications
[email protected]
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ibm-fellow-and-quantum-pioneer-charles-h-bennett-receives-am-turing-award-computings-highest-honor-302716730.html
SOURCE IBM
