Speaker: Borhan Ahmadi ICTQT Abstract I am going to give a controversial seminar concerning entropy production in quantum thermodynamics. I will show that there exists a fundamental difference between microscopic quantum thermodynamics and macroscopic classical thermodynamics. It will be proved that the entropy production in quantum thermodynamics always vanishes for both closed and open quantum […]
ConferenceKCIK online session: Current Trends in Quantum Information Programme 10:00 Opening of the session including Golden, Silver and Bronze KCIK Award results for 2019 A) keynote speakers 10:15 - 10:55 David de Vincenzo (Juelich): Blind Oracle Quantum Computation 11:00 - 11:40 Nicolas Gisin (Geneva): Non-locality in Networks 11:45-12:00 coffee break B) talks of Laureates 12:00 […]
Speaker: Gláucia Murta, Heinrich-Heine-Universitat Dusseldorf Abstract Going beyond the simple two-party scenario of quantum key distribution, we consider N parties who wish to certify security against a potential eavesdropper in a cryptographic task. Moreover, we consider the very adversarial scenario in which the parties make no assumption about the underlying quantum system or the internal […]
Speaker: Máté Farkas, UG/ICTQT Abstract As quantum technologies advance, the certification of high-dimensional quantum devices becomes more and more relevant. This is essential both for verifying the outcome of quantum computations, and for guaranteeing the security of cryptographic devices. In this talk, I will focus on the certification of quantum measurement devices performing measurements in […]
Speaker: David Schmid, University of Waterloo / Perimeter Institute Abstract A standard approach to quantifying resources is to determine which operations on the resources are freely available and to deduce the ordering relation among the resources that these operations induce. If the resource of interest is the nonclassicality of the correlations embodied in a quantum state, […]
Speaker: Akshata Shenoy ICTQT Abstract Modern communication strives towards provably secure systems which can be widely deployed. Quantum key distribution provides a methodology to verify the integrity and security of a key exchange based on physical laws. However, physical systems often fall short of theoretical models, meaning they can be compromised through uncharacterized side-channels. The […]
Speaker: Jan Tuziemski, Stockholm University Abstract Recent theoretical and experimental studies have shown significance of quantum information scrambling for problems encountered in high-energy physics, quantum information, and condensed matter. Due to complexity of quantum many-body systems it is plausible that new developments in this field will be achieved by experimental explorations. Therefore, a better theoretical understanding […]
Speaker: Patryk Lipka-Bartosik, University of Bristol Abstract The standard benchmark for teleportation is the average fidelity of teleportation and according to this benchmark not all states are useful for teleportation. It was recently shown, however, that all entangled states lead to nonclassical teleportation, with there being no classical scheme able to reproduce the states teleported to […]
Speaker: Markus Frembs Abstract Contextuality is a key feature of quantum mechanics, as was first brought to light by Bohr and later realised more technically by Kochen and Specker. Isham and Butterfield put contextuality at the heart of their topos-based formalism and gave a reformulation of the Kochen-Specker theorem in the language of presheaves. Here, […]