MQV-Kolloquien sind interdisziplinäre Vorträge, die sowohl von lokalen als auch von eingeladenen internationalen Experten gehalten werden. Die Kolloquien, die per Videokonferenz für ein weltweites Publikum zugänglich sind, decken alle Facetten der Quantentechnologien ab, wobei der Schwerpunkt auf den Forschungsaktivitäten des MQV liegt. Ziel der Reihe ist es, Verbindungen zu Experten:innen auf dem Gebiet der Quantentechnologie weltweit herzustellen und zu stärken und eine Plattform für Bildung und wissenschaftlichen Austausch in und mit dem lokalen Quanten-Ökosystem zu bieten.
Martin Ringbauer – Uni Innsbruck
Current quantum computers and simulators are almost exclusively built for binary information processing. Yet, the underlying quantum information carriers are almost always inherently multilevel systems. Similarly, many quantum simulation applications are naturally formulated in terms of high-dimensional Hilbert spaces. I will discuss the opportunities and challenges for universal quantum information processing with qudits in a trapped-ion system. I will then show how we can use these systems not only to natively simulate high-dimensional problems such as lattice gauge theories, but also to drastically improve the experimental overheads in the characterization of quantum states and the training of variational circuits.
Martin Ringbauer received his PhD in experimental quantum optics from the University of Queensland, Australia in 2016. He then worked as a postdoctoral researcher in quantum photonics at Heriot-Watt University in Scotland. In 2018 he joined the University of Innsbruck, to work on quantum information processing with trapped ions. His research interests cover quantum computing and quantum simulation, with a particular focus on the development of new approaches based on high-dimensional trapped-ion qudits. He has been awarded the ERC Starting Grant in 2022.
Nehmen Sie an unserem Online-Kolloquium über Zoom teil unter:
https://eu01web.zoom.us/j/64158654884?pwd=VUZSczcrSXJuaEJzbmJwamN4V0Nvdz09
Meeting ID: 641 5865 4884, Kenncode: 823197