'''Overview'''
This workshop will bring together the diverse communities that will need to co-operate to standardize and deploy the next-generation cryptographic infrastructure, in particular, one that will be secure against emerging quantum computing technologies.
'''Goals'''
Research Fellow in Quantum Information and Simulation with Rydberg Ions
University of Nottingham - School of Physics & Astronomy
£27,854 - £36,298 per annum, depending on skills and experience. Salary progression beyond this scale is subject to performance
Lecturer in Theoretical Condensed Matter Physics
University of Nottingham -School of Physics & Astronomy
£33,230 - £44,607 per annum depending on skills and experience. Salary progression beyond this scale is subject to performance
Submitted by
Mleifer on Wed, 10/04/2013 - 15:36.
This is our "Nobel Prize" lecture. Dietrich is a long time colleague of David Wineland at NIST and will tell us about the latest research from the Ion Storage Group.
To join the hangout or watch the livestream go to http://gplus.to/qplus at the appointed hour. Please note the unusual start time of 5pm BST(UTC+1)
Date: 23rd April 2013 5pm BST(UTC+1)
Speaker: Dietrich Leibfried (NIST)
Title: Towards scalable quantum information processing and quantum simulation with trapped ions
Submitted by
Kbanasz on Thu, 04/04/2013 - 07:14.
The Faculty of Physics of the University of Warsaw invites applications for two research positions in quantum physics and quantum optics. The positions are funded from the European Union’s 7th Framework Programme project PhoQuS@UW: Fostering Excellence in Photonics and Quantum Science which aims at expanding experimental and theoretical research in widely defined optics and quantum physics including quantum optics and quantum information, ultrafast optics, atto-science, photonics, biophotonics, plasmonics, and related areas of research.
* Introduction
Speakers will cover the wide range of subjects to which Samson made pioneering contributions, stretching from the semantics of programming languages, including domain theory and game semantics, via logic were he introduced important notions such as full completeness, to quantum computing and quantum foundations, where he is a father of categorical quantum mechanics.
The counterintuitive features of quantum physics have already revolutionized our understanding of how the world behaves on the microscopic level. But are there any non-trivial consequences of quantum effects that have a functional relevance for biology?
The 2013 edition of the Summer School on Quantum Information, Computing and Control - QuICC - will take place at Imperial College London, run by students in the Centre for Doctoral Training in Controlled Quantum Dynamics. We aim to bring together some of the foremost researchers from a number of related fields to provide a unique educational experience for ourselves and students from other institutions, and to create an atmosphere conducive to new collaborations.
AQIS'13 is a meeting focused on quantum information processing, communication and cryptography, an interdisciplinary field bridging quantum physics, computer science, mathematics, and information technologies. This event, which is the thirteenth in a highly successful series, building upon EQIS'01-05 and AQIS'06-12, is coming to India for the first time, having been held previously in Japan, China and Korea. This is the prime Asian conference in the field.
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