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URL: https://osc.caltech.edu/

โ‡ฑ Office of Communications and External Relations


Our office's mission is to promote broad understanding, awareness, and recognition of Caltech's research, people, accomplishments, and legacy across print and digital channels and events.

We work closely with divisions, departments, and individuals across campus to effectively communicate the impact Caltech has on science and the world through the Institute's main web pages, social media channels, central publications, events, and partnerships with media outlets and channels.

For Press and Media

Our staff can connect local, national, and international media organizations with Caltech researchers, faculty, and staff. We assist news crews with filming on campus, and help provide information, images, and multimedia assets. We also manage press briefings at the Media Center at the Caltech Seismological Lab.

Caltech Identity

Caltech's strategic identity system is a guide to help individuals across campus correctly use Caltech symbols, fonts, colors, and photos in correspondence, websites, publications, and projects.


Filming at Caltech

Our office manages commercial filming and special occasion photography on Caltech's campus. We provide guidelines on commercial and documentary filming, forms for requesting videography and photography for private events, information about fees and payments, regulations, and other resources.

Explore our work

Caltech's voice on social media

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  • #TechertoTecher
  • #AskCaltech
๐Ÿ‘ Research from Caltech and Oratomic have developed a new approach for reducing the errors that riddle todayโ€™s rudimentary quantum computers. Whereas these machines were previously thought to require millions of qubits to work properly, the new results indicate that a fully realized quantum computer could be built with as few as 10,000 to 20,000 qubits.The need for fewer qubits means that quantum computers could, in theory, be operational by the end of the decade. The new scheme means that each logical qubit could be encoded with as few as five or so physical qubits, as opposed to the 1,000 needed with other techniques. More broadly, as these systems scale to thousands of logical qubits performing millions of operations, they are expected to enable a wide range of applications with major scientific and economic impact. #Caltech #Quantum #QuantumComputing #FutureOfSTEM
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  • #QuantumComputing
  • #FutureOfSTEM
  • #Caltech
  • #AAAS