AAV Anniversary Conference - Celebrating 30 Years of Weak Values

Organising group(s): 

Institute for Quantum Studies, Chapman University

Registration deadline: 

Friday, February 23, 2018

Submission deadline: 

Friday, February 23, 2018

Tags: 

Location: 

Chapman University
One University Drive California
Orange
United States
33° 47' 36.0528" N, 117° 51' 4.86" W
US

We cordially invite you to join us for a celebratory conference commemorating the 30th anniversary of the first paper on weak values by Aharonov, Albert and Vaidman. The conference will be held at Chapman University from March 1st – 2nd, immediately to be followed by another Chapman conference on Quantum Simulation and Quantum Walks from March 3rd – 4th, which you are, of course, very welcome to attend.

Please visit our website to register, and make hotel reservations: https://www.chapman.edu/research/institutes-and-centers/quantum-studies/aav.aspx. There, you will also find instructions for submitting an abstract for a poster presentation.

Also, note that the March Meeting of the American Physical Society takes place the following week (March 5-9) in Los Angeles, CA, which is near Chapman University, providing you with a triple reason to come visit with us in sunny Southern California.

Further details about the aims of the conference follow below.

The concept of a weak value, first formulated by Aharonov, Albert and Vaidman in their 1988 PRL paper "How the result of a measurement of a component of a spin-1/2 particle can turn out to be 100" (PRL 60:1351, 1988) has attracted widespread attention, which has only increased in recent years. It has given rise to a lot of interesting thought experiments, many of which are now being implemented in the lab. The mathematical formalism of weak values has also given rise to the related concept of superoscillations, which have been of great interest to mathematical physicists.

In recent years anomalous weak values have been shown to be related to quantum contextuality, and have attracted increasing attention for their possible application to quantum metrology, known as "weak value amplification".

This symposium will survey the development of weak values, and explore the current debates about their foundational significance and practical applications.