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Entanglement in Many-Body Systems: From Nuclei to Quantum Computers and Back

InQubator for Quantum Simulation workshop
Monday, September 9, 2024 - 9:00am to Friday, September 20, 2024 - 3:30pm

This workshop will be centered around the topic of entanglement in many-body systems relevant for and connected to NP. The goal is to advance exchanges of ideas and techniques between NP and other fields of many-body physics such as condensed matter, quantum chemistry or quantum field theories. These areas are already well advanced in the characterization and use of entanglement for the description of many-body systems, and in the development of experimental techniques for producing and detecting entangled states. The knowledge acquired in these fields can guide progress in the development of entanglement-driven methods for classical and quantum simulations of nuclei, and in the identification of experiments probing entanglement in nuclear systems. Vice versa, specificities of many-body NP techniques can potentially be useful for other fields, and QIS in general. The workshop will explore these different aspects.

IQuS workshops are designed to bring together a cross-disciplinary group of researchers, and provide an immersive environment to nurture discussion, collective brainstorming and initiate possible collaborations.  Following this spirit, we aim for a light schedule in term of talks and prioritize group discussions, in order to ensure exchanges of ideas and methods, and foster progress around the topic of entanglement in different fields of quantum many-body physics

Format and Scope:

The workshop has a lightly-planned schedule, with two talk sessions per day and plenty of time for interaction and collaboration between participants. In addition, there will be focussed “rump sessions” throughout both weeks. Reflecting the diverse (scientific) background of participants and the interdisciplinary scope, these will allow us to interconnect,  identify common goals and learn from each other strategies to reach them. Feel free to send us your expectations and suggestions beforehand, crobin@physik.uni-bielefeld.de. Or, to prepare in advance, let other participants know that you are excited to learn about what common interest you may share.

 

Workshop Participants:  Monika Aidelsburger (Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Munich, Germany), Yassid Ayyad (Univ. de Santiago de Compostela, Spain), Baha Balantekin (Univ.of Wisconsin, USA), Thomas Barthel (Duke Univ., USA), Douglas Beck (U. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA),  Ramya Bhaskar (IQuS, Univ. of Washington, USA), Alejandro Bermúdez (Instituto de Fisica, Teorica, CSIC-UAM, Madrid, Spain), Ed Chen (IBM Quantum, San Jose and Research Triangle, USA), Jiunn-Wei Chen (National Taiwan Univ., Taiwan), Vincenzo Cirigliano (Institute for Nuclear Theory, USA), Henry Froland (IQuS, Univ. of Washington, USA), Boyu Gao (Duke Univ., USA), Jutho Haegeman (Ghent Univ., Belgium),  Alioscia Hamma (U. of Napoli and INFN, Italy),  Momme Hengstenberg (Bielefeld University, Germany), Heiko Hergert (Michigan State Univ., USA), Marc Illa (IQuS, Univ. of Washington, USA), Raphael Kaubruegger (JILA, Colorado Univ. Boulder, USA),  James Keeble (Bielefeld University, Germany), Dima Kharzeev (Stony Brook Univ., USA),  Natalie Klco (Duke Univ., USA), Denis Lacroix (Paris-Saclay University – IJCLab, France), Örs Legeza (Wigner Research Center for Physics, Hungary), Ash Milsted (AWS Center for Quantum Computing, Pasadena, USA), Wolfgang Mittig (Michigan State Univ. and FRIB, USA),  Niklas Mueller (IQuS, Univ. of Washington, USA),  Thomas Papenbrock (Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA), Axel Pérez-Obiol (Universtat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain), Kenneth Roche (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA), Ermal Rrapaj (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA),  Enrique Rico Ortega (Ikerbasque @ UPVH/EHU, Spain), Lea Santos (Univ. of Conneticut, USA), Pooja Siwach (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA), Achim Schwenk (TU Darmstadt, Germany),  Ionel Stetcu (Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA), Emmanuele Tirrito (Univ. of Trento, Italy), Rahul Trivedi (Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, Munich, Germany), Alexander Volya (Florida State Univ., USA), Erez Zohar (Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem, Israel).

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