QuARC Meeting: Scoping Opportunities for Applying and Developing Quantum Technologies

Illustration

llustration: Lee Armstrong

The first QuARC Meeting: Scoping Opportunities for Applying and Developing Quantum Technologies will be an informal gathering of the Kent Quantum Technologies (QT) community and allied fields. It aims to seek opportunities to apply and/or develop QT to the many scientific fields of enquiry in which Kent staff carry out frontier research.

Date and Venue

The meeting will take place on campus on Wednesday the 6th of May, 1pm-5pm, in Kennedy Seminar Room 1. Please register by 4pm on Thursday 30 April, thank you.

Registration

Registration is free. Everyone at Kent is welcome.  The registration form is light-touch (2 mins) and requires just entering your name and affiliation, confirming if you are happy to give a brief, informal talk (no need to provide a title), and mention any dietary requirements.

Programme

There will be a series of brief (15 min) talks followed by plenty of informal discussion (5 mins per talk + two 30-min coffee breaks):

 

1.00-1.10pm Jorge Quintanilla (EMP, QuARC, PQM)
1.10-1.40pm Carlos Perez-Delgado (School of Computing, QuARC, ICSS)
1.40-2.00pm Gunnar Möller (EMP, Physics of Quantum & Materials group)
2.00-2.20pm Coffee break
2.20-2.40pm Tobias Hartung (Northeastern University London, Computing) – SLIDES
2.40-3.00pm Tri-Dung Nguyen (KBS)
3.00-3.20pm Sanjay Bhattacherjee (School of Computing, Cyber Security Research Group and iCSS)
3.20-3.40pm Coffee break
3.40-4.00pm Adrian Podoleanu (Applied Optics Group)
4.00-4.20pm Andy Hone (EMP, Maths)
4.20-4.40pm Elaine Czech (Computing, specialising in Human-Computer Interactions)
4.40-5.00pm Marco Paviotti (Computing)

Instructions for speakers

Please send your talk to quarcinfo@kent.ac.uk before 11am on the day of the meeting. This will allow us to load your talk on the seminar room PC before the start of the meeting to minimise time switching speakers. Make sure your talk is in Powerpoint or PDF format.

Due to the multi-disciplinary nature of the meeting, participants are asked to keep their talks at a level relevant to a non-specialist audience.

Given the tight programme, could you please rehearse your talk and make sure that you can deliver it in 15 mins.

Participants are be asked to

  • EITHER describe their research field, emphasising some current challenges that might benefit form a QT approach or
  • OR present current work using QT approaches.

All talks are welcome, including from those not currently working on QT.

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