Seminar

IQC Seminar - Johannes Prell, Institute of Communication and Navigation, OSL German Aerospace Center (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

Quantum Nano Centre (QNC) Room 0101 200 University Ave West, Waterloo Ontario

Satellite based laser communication technology both classical and QKD (Q uantum K ey D istribution is gaining popularity and being increasingly commercial i zed . Optical ground stations serve as the receiv ing station in satellite to ground scenarios. The DLR institute of Communications and Navigation hosts an experimental optical ground station for research and demonstration purpose. Supporting increasingly demanding technical requirements from current and futu re missions and technology demonstrations, it was decided to replace the 40cm Cassegrain telescope an equip the new one with Nasmyth Ports for direct experiments, a Coudé Path to the lab and an Adaptive Optics System . This new 80cm (31.5inch) main apertur e diameter i nstrument is a Nasmyth Design Ritchey Chretien telescope The special feature is the C oudé P ath which is guiding the received light onto an optical table in a lab oratory room below the telescope mount (see figure 1 The usage of the Coudé Path is new implemented at DLR and offers a wide possibility for several different experiments with the same setup The optical propaga tion through a custom designed lens system inside the coudé path is optimized for wavelength s used for optical communication, like 589nm, 850nm, 1064nm and 1550nm. It is possible to use the setup as a receiving station and also as a transmitting facility f or beacon lasers . The transmitt ing system ca n be installed either beside the telescope as a side installation or even launched from the optical table through coudé path and telescope directly

The optical Experiment table in the lab is equipped with an Adaptive Optics ( System including fibe r coupling. This system uses a Shack Hartmann Wave front sensor, designed to match a deformable mirror in the “ f ried g eometry”. The system couples the light into a single mode fibe r , which can be con nected to a coherent or Quantum encrypted communications system. [ The telescope itself has four usable Nasmyth ports The first one is reserved for the coudé pa th, t wo others are equipped with optical benches directly on the telescope, and on the last one has a fixed classical laser communication receiving setup including two cameras one visible light and one infra red and a signal receiving united is installed References

[1] Andrew Paul Reeves, Ilija R. Hristovski, Alexandru Octavian Duliu, Stefanie H äu sler, Hela Friew Kelemu, Pia Lützen, Florian Moll, Eltimir Peev, Juraj Poliak, Amita Shrestha, Joana Sul Torres; Adaptive Optics Corrected Bi Directional Links with a Geo Stationary Satellite from the DLR KN Optical Ground Station Figure 1 OGSOP System Overvi ew

Wednesday, October 4, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Impromptu Whiteboard Poster Session

Impromptu Whiteboard Poster Session

Quantum Nano Centre (QNC) Room 1201, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON

This week’s student seminar will take place in the form of an impromptu whiteboard poster session, where attendees will be divided into groups and will discuss each other's current work using the whiteboard. This is to encourage students to talk about their work in progress, and practice communication skills by talking to non-experts (quantum is a big field!). As always, pizza will be provided for attendees after the seminar.

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Wednesday, September 20, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Shlok Ashok Nahar

Using Symmetries to Improve Quantum de Finetti Reductions

Quantum Nano Centre, 200 University Ave W, Room QNC 1201
Waterloo, ON, CA N2L 3G1

The analysis of quantum information processing protocols for generic states is challenging. In contrast, when the states are IID, i.e. the same in every round of the protocol, the analysis greatly simplifies. de Finetti reductions are important to reduce the analysis of quantum information processing tasks to the IID case, though this reduction has some cost associated with it. In this talk I will describe how IID-symmetries can be used to reduce the cost associated with the quantum de Finetti reductions.

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Monday, October 2, 2023 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Beyond the Pipeline: Fostering Equity in Our Quantum Future

Kim de Laat, University of Waterloo

Quantum Nano Centre (QNC) Room 0101, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, ON

The field of quantum computing has a unique opportunity to pre-empt many of the inequities that have riddled AI and computer science. But radical technologies require new, radical solutions. In this talk, I take issue with the leaky pipeline metaphor as a way of structuring policy interventions concerning inequality in STEM fields. I outline three reasons why overreliance on the leaky pipeline metaphor is problematic: (1) it does not accurately represent the phenomenon it is meant to describe; (2) it is incomplete; and (3) it does not capture the full heterogeneity of experiences with inequality in STEM disciplines. I conclude the talk by sharing feedback from the quantum technology community concerning potential pitfalls in the pursuit of equity in quantum, and what we can do about it.

Wednesday, September 13, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Chung-You (Gilbert) Shih

Programmable Individual Optical Addressing for Trapped-ion Quantum Information Processors

Trapped ions are among the most advanced platforms for quantum computation and simulation. Programmable, arbitrary, and precise control—usually through laser-induced light-matter interaction—is required to tune ion-ion interactions. These interactions translate into diverse parameters of the system under study. Current technologies grapple with scalability issues in large ion chains and with "crosstalk" due to micron-level inter-ion separation.

In this talk, we present our development of two optical addressing systems optimized for non-coherent and coherent quantum controls, respectively.

The first addressing system employs a reprogrammable hologram to modulate the wavefront of the addressing beam, thereby engineering the amplitude and phase profile of light across the ion chain. Our implementation compensates for optical aberrations in the system down to λ/20 RMS and exhibits less than 10−4 intensity cross-talk error. This results in more than 99.9% fidelity when resetting the state or 99.66% when reading out the state of an individual ion without influencing adjacent ions. This scheme can be readily extended to over a hundred ions and adapted to other platforms, such as neutral atom arrays.

Additionally, we introduce another addressing design, tailored for coherent quantum operations through Raman transitions. This design uses a mirrored acoustic-optical deflector (AOD) setup to optimize optical power scaling and sidestep the undesired site-dependent frequency shift commonly observed in AOD-based setups.

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Tuesday, August 29, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Shayan Majidy

Critical Phase and Spin Sharpening in SU(2)-Symmetric Monitored Quantum Circuits

Monitored quantum circuits exhibit entanglement transitions at certain measurement rates. Such a transition separates phases characterized by how much information an observer can learn from the measurement outcomes. We study SU(2)-symmetric monitored quantum circuits, using exact numerics and a mapping onto an effective statistical-mechanics model. Due to the symmetry's non-Abelian nature, measuring qubit pairs allows for nontrivial entanglement scaling even in the measurement-only limit. We find a transition between a volume-law entangled phase and a critical phase whose diffusive purification dynamics emerge from the non-Abelian symmetry. Additionally, we identify a “spin-sharpening transition.” Across the transition, the rate at which measurements reveal information about the total spin quantum number changes parametrically with system size.

Reference https://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.108.054307

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IQC Seminar - Sahel Ashhab, National Institute of Information and Communications, Japan

Superconducting qubits are based on nonlinear electric circuits that support multiple quantum states. Although only two states are used to realize a qubit, it is possible to utilize more states and realize qudits (d-level quantum systems). We have proposed and experimentally demonstrated optimized implementations of qutrit gates. We have also investigated the time-optimal implementation of two-qubit gates in weakly anharmonic superconducting circuits.

Wednesday, August 9, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Yuming Zhao

Positivity and Sum-of-Squares in Quantum Information

A multivariate polynomial is said to be positive if it takes only non-negative values over reals. Hilbert's 17th problem concerns whether every positive polynomial can be expressed as a sum of squares of other polynomials. In general, we say a noncommutative polynomial is positive (resp. matrix positive) if plugging operators (resp. matrices) always yields a positive operator. Many problems in math and computer science are closely connected to deciding whether a given polynomial is positive and finding certificates (e.g., sum-of-squares) of positivity.

In the study of nonlocal games in quantum information, we are interested in tensor product of free algebras. Such an algebra models a physical system with two spatially separated subsystems, where in each subsystem we can make different quantum measurements. The recent and remarkable MIP*=RE result shows that it is undecidable to determine whether a polynomial in a tensor product of free algebras is matrix positive. In this talk, I'll present joint work with Arthur Mehta and William Slofstra, in which we show that it is undecidable to determine positivity in tensor product of free algebras. As a consequence, there is no sum-of-square certificate for positivity in such algebras.

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Tuesday, August 1, 2023 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

IQC Student Seminar Featuring Shlok Nahar

Time-resolved Quantum Key Distribution using Semiconductor Quantum Dots with Oscillating Photonic States

Abstract: Quantum dot-based entangled photon sources are promising candidates for quantum key distribution (QKD), as they can in principle emit deterministically, with high brightness and low multiphoton contribution. However, quantum dots (QD) often inherently possess a fine structure splitting (FSS). Since the entangled photonic state in the presence of non-zero FSS is oscillating, one must settle for a lower efficiency source through temporal post-selection or a lower measured entanglement fidelity. In both cases, the overall key rate is reduced. Our QKD analysis shows that this trade-off can be overcome by constructing a time-resolved QKD protocol where all photon pairs emitted by a QD with non-zero FSS can be used in secret key generation. This protocol works only when the detection system's temporal resolution is much smaller than the FSS period. By implementing our protocol, higher key rates can be achieved as compared to previous QKD experiments with QD entangled photon pair sources.

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Thursday, July 27, 2023 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm EDT (GMT -04:00)

Some convex subsets of the set of quantum channels

CS/Math Seminar - Rajesh Pereira, the University of Guelph

We explore two convex subsets of the sets of quantum channels. The set of mixed unitary channels and the set of entanglement breaking channels. We study the geometry of these sets, and show how certain geometric and spectral properties of these sets can be studied using positive definite functions, stochastic matrices and other mathematical tools.