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author Murillo, Juan M.
de Guzmán, Ignacio García Rodríguez
Moguel, Enrique
Romero-Álvarez, Javier
Alvarado-Valiente, Jaime
Aparicio-Morales, Álvaro M.
Garcia-Alonso, Jose
Muñoz, Ana Díaz
Fernández-Medina, Eduardo
Chicano, Francisco
Canal, Carlos
Viqueira, José Daniel
Villarroya, Sebastián
Gutiérrez, Eduardo
Romero-Flores, Adrián
Márquez-Chamorro, Alfonso E.
Ruiz-Cortes, Antonio
Kesiku, Cyrille YetuYetu
Sánchez, Pedro
Cáceres, Diego Alonso
Sánchez-González, Lidia
Plou, Fernando
author_facet Murillo, Juan M.
de Guzmán, Ignacio García Rodríguez
Moguel, Enrique
Romero-Álvarez, Javier
Alvarado-Valiente, Jaime
Aparicio-Morales, Álvaro M.
Garcia-Alonso, Jose
Muñoz, Ana Díaz
Fernández-Medina, Eduardo
Chicano, Francisco
Canal, Carlos
Viqueira, José Daniel
Villarroya, Sebastián
Gutiérrez, Eduardo
Romero-Flores, Adrián
Márquez-Chamorro, Alfonso E.
Ruiz-Cortes, Antonio
Kesiku, Cyrille YetuYetu
Sánchez, Pedro
Cáceres, Diego Alonso
Sánchez-González, Lidia
Plou, Fernando
contents The first edition of the QuantumX track, held within the XXIX Jornadas de Ingeniería del Software y Bases de Datos (JISBD 2025), brought together leading Spanish research groups working at the intersection of Quantum Computing and Software Engineering. The event served as a pioneering forum to explore how principles of software quality, governance, testing, orchestration, and abstraction can be adapted to the quantum paradigm. The presented works spanned diverse areas (from quantum service engineering and hybrid architectures to quality models, circuit optimization, and quantum machine learning), reflecting the interdisciplinary nature and growing maturity of Quantum Computing and Quantum Software Engineering. The track also fostered community building and collaboration through the presentation of national and Ibero-American research networks such as RIPAISC and QSpain, and through dedicated networking sessions that encouraged joint initiatives. Beyond reporting on the event, this article provides a structured synthesis of the contributions presented at QuantumX, identifies common research themes and engineering concerns, and outlines a set of open challenges and future directions for the advancement of Quantum Software Engineering. This first QuantumX track established the foundation for a sustained research community and positioned Spain as an emerging contributor to the European and global quantum software ecosystem.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_10621
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle QuantumX: an experience for the consolidation of Quantum Computing and Quantum Software Engineering as an emerging discipline
Murillo, Juan M.
de Guzmán, Ignacio García Rodríguez
Moguel, Enrique
Romero-Álvarez, Javier
Alvarado-Valiente, Jaime
Aparicio-Morales, Álvaro M.
Garcia-Alonso, Jose
Muñoz, Ana Díaz
Fernández-Medina, Eduardo
Chicano, Francisco
Canal, Carlos
Viqueira, José Daniel
Villarroya, Sebastián
Gutiérrez, Eduardo
Romero-Flores, Adrián
Márquez-Chamorro, Alfonso E.
Ruiz-Cortes, Antonio
Kesiku, Cyrille YetuYetu
Sánchez, Pedro
Cáceres, Diego Alonso
Sánchez-González, Lidia
Plou, Fernando
Software Engineering
The first edition of the QuantumX track, held within the XXIX Jornadas de Ingeniería del Software y Bases de Datos (JISBD 2025), brought together leading Spanish research groups working at the intersection of Quantum Computing and Software Engineering. The event served as a pioneering forum to explore how principles of software quality, governance, testing, orchestration, and abstraction can be adapted to the quantum paradigm. The presented works spanned diverse areas (from quantum service engineering and hybrid architectures to quality models, circuit optimization, and quantum machine learning), reflecting the interdisciplinary nature and growing maturity of Quantum Computing and Quantum Software Engineering. The track also fostered community building and collaboration through the presentation of national and Ibero-American research networks such as RIPAISC and QSpain, and through dedicated networking sessions that encouraged joint initiatives. Beyond reporting on the event, this article provides a structured synthesis of the contributions presented at QuantumX, identifies common research themes and engineering concerns, and outlines a set of open challenges and future directions for the advancement of Quantum Software Engineering. This first QuantumX track established the foundation for a sustained research community and positioned Spain as an emerging contributor to the European and global quantum software ecosystem.
title QuantumX: an experience for the consolidation of Quantum Computing and Quantum Software Engineering as an emerging discipline
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.10621