Structured Beams as Quantum Probes
PhD Thesis Presentation
Candidate: Dusan Sarenac
Supervisor: David Cory
On deposit in the Science graduate office, PHY 2013.
Oral defence Monday, June 4, 1:30 p.m., RAC 2009.
Candidate: Dusan SarenacSupervisor: David Cory
On deposit in the Science graduate office, PHY 2013.
Oral defence Monday, June 4, 1:30 p.m., RAC 2009.
A brief history and overview of the requirements to guide the research and development for high-coherence superconducting quantum circuits will be given. The main focus will be on materials development at NIST. Topics will include identifying and mitigating loss due to amorphous two-level systems at interfaces and how to scale the fabrication of small aluminum-oxide tunnel junctions. The junctions were studied with atom probe microscopy to get an understanding of where the oxidation occurs.
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The Creative Destruction Lab (CDL) is hosting a half-day symposium to discuss recent advances in Quantum Machine Learning, its near-term industry applications, and opportunities for commercialization with private financing as a technology startup.
I give an overview of trapped ion quantum information experiments and discuss prospects for implementing multi-valued quantum logic using trapped ions.
Whenever one is tempted to employ a quantum system for any kind of applications, the focus usually lies on two properties setting it apart from a system described by a classical theory, namely the coherent superposition of different quantum states and entanglement between two ore more constituents forming the system.
David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science
We present a quantum algorithm for simulating the dynamics of Hamiltonians that are not necessarily sparse. Our algorithm is based on the assumption that the entries of the Hamiltonian are stored in a data structure that allows for the efficient preparation of states that encode the rows of the Hamiltonian. We use a linear combination of quantum walks to achieve a poly-logarithmic dependence on the precision.
Port-based teleportation (PBT) is a variant of the well-known task of quantum teleportation in which Alice and Bob share multiple entangled states called "ports". While in the standard teleportation protocol using a single entangled state the receiver Bob has to apply a non-trivial correction unitary, in PBT he merely has to pick up the right quantum system at a port specified by the classical message he received from Alice.
With traditional classical complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) computing struggling to keep up with Moore’s law, interest in quantum computing has exploded and the University of Waterloo is at the centre of this technological revolution.