The candidate will join a highly entrepreneurial group advancing computation and communications technology by exploring quantum and optical phenomena. The candidate will lead and support experimental efforts in quantum and optical phenomena performing various measurement and applied physics/engineering tasks. Position responsibilities will include building and developing novel experiments to demonstrate advanced concepts in a system environment.
Job Accountabilities:
Our Quantum Information Processing group is developing complete, vertically integrated, next generation communication, sensing, and computation systems, from the physical layer to applications, using new quantum, superconducting, and optical technologies. Our scientists are an interdisciplinary team of physicists, mathematicians, information theorists, and systems engineers with expertise in superconducting quantum circuits, quantum memory physics, quantum and classical information theory, and classical optical networking. Through our research,
Title: Experimental Quantum Engineer
Department: Quantum Information Processing
Location: Cambridge MA
Title: Quantum Information and Computer Science
Department: Quantum Information Processing
Location: Cambridge MA
The study of thermalization has become an especially hot topic of research in the past several years, and there are multiple advanced workshops on the subject. However, these have been aimed at experts in the field. There is a clear need for an instructional program targeted at educating junior researchers across the disciplines including statistical mechanics, hard and soft condensed-matter physics, biophysics, nuclear physics, string theory, and quantum information theory.
Submitted by
Prabhurama on Tue, 04/12/2012 - 06:51.
Applications are invited for post-doctoral fellowships in Quantum Information at the Quantum Information and Computation Group, Harish-Chandra Research Institute (HRI), Allahabad, India. To know more about the activities of the group, please visit www.hri.res.in/~qic/. The fellowships are initially offered for one year and they can be extended for another two years.
Interested candidates should send an application along with
(1) a curriculum vitae,
(2) a list of publications, and
(3) a research plan,
Submission deadline:
Saturday, December 29, 2012
Over the past few decades, philosophers of physics and others have made important contributions to the mathematical and conceptual foundations of physical theories by critically analyzing how the mathematical structures of such theories inform central philosophical concerns, and in some cases by proving new theorems of high philosophical interest. This conference aims to bring together physicists, mathematicians, and philosophers of physics working on such technical issues. The venue is April 4, 2013 at the Center for Philosophy of Science in Pittsburgh.
Submission deadline:
Thursday, January 31, 2013
This conference will consider topics across the entire spectrum of foundational and philosophical approaches to physical theory. Whilst there will be a particular focus upon the analysis of specific physical theories (e.g. classical and quantum theories of spacetime, quantum mechanics, quantum field theory, statistical physics), also invited are submissions on methodological questions, experimental practices, and the study of philosophically interesting episodes from the history of physics.
Submitted by
Quantifex on Mon, 03/12/2012 - 12:06.
This is the first announcement of the workshop on Relativistic Quantum Information that will take place on June 24-26 2013 at the University of Nottingham. This workshop is going to be the next in the annual series of RQI-North workshops. This years aim is to bring together researchers from a diverse range of backgrounds, including those working in the fields of the Unruh effect, the dynamical Casimir effect, analogue gravity, quantum information theory and foundational physics.
Submitted by
Gbjork on Mon, 03/12/2012 - 12:06.
For two decades the Central European Workshop on Quantum Optics (CEWQO) has provided an annual forum for the quantum optics and quantum information community to present their latest scientific results. An important feature of the meeting is the possibility for young researchers to interact with some of the leading figures in quantum optics and related fields.
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