8.–9. Dez. 2025
FIAP
Europe/Paris Zeitzone

Program

Program

Book of abstract

Invited speakers:

Eleni Diamanti (LIP6, Sorbonne University, CNRS): Quantum networking resources and applications

Nadezhda Kukharchyk (Walther-Meißner-Institut der BAdW, TUM): Electron spin ensembles for microwave quantum communication

Dominik Bucher (TUM School of Natural Sciences): Optically addressable spin systems in diamond and proteins for quantum sensing and imaging

Saïda Guellati-Khelifa (LKB, Sorbonne University, CNRS): Probing the spatial distribution of k-vectors in-situ with Bose-Einstein condensate

Simon Apers (IRIF, Paris Cité University, CNRS): Self-concordant Schrôdinger operators: spectral gaps and optimization without condition numbers

Stefan Filipp (Walther-Meißner-Institut der BAdW, TUM): Optimal Control for Robust Quantum Operations and Multi-Qubit State Engineering in Superconducting Circuits

Thomas Chalopin (LCF, IOGS, Paris-Saclay University, CNRS): Universal non-Gaussian statistics of the order parameter in the superfluid transition

Frank Pollmann (TUM School of Natural Sciences): Exploring the Dynamics of Quantum Phases of Matter on Quantum Processors

 

Contributed talks: 

Mostafa Abasifard (TUM School of Natural Sciences): Quantum Communication using single photon emitters in 2D materials 
 
Ivan Ashkarin (LAC, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS): Long-range CCPhase gates via radio-frequency-induced Förster resonances
 
Richard Milbradt (TUM): Utilizing Tree Tensor Networks for Classical Simulation of Quantum Systems
 
Sara Murciano (LPTMS, Université Paris-Saclay, CNRS): Quantum sensing with critical systems: advantages and challenges
 
Alexei Ourjoumtsev (JEIP Collège de France, CNRS): Protecting collective qubits from non-Markovian dephasing
 
Emily Wright (Walther-Meißner-Institut der BAdW, TUM): Superconducting Qubit Gates Robust to Parameter Drifts and Fluctuations
 
Lovro Anto Barišić (LPENS, PSL Université, CNRS): Downfolding a quantum many-body system: the quasi-1D Fermi polaron
 
Ahmed Barakat (TUM School of Computation, Information and Technology): Dynamic Stark and Autler-Townes Splittings in Classical Systems
 

 

Roundtable discussion moderator: Philippe Grangier (LCF, IOGS, Paris-Saclay University, CNRS)

Roundtable participants: Eleni Diamanti, Stefan Filipp, Tatjana Wilk, Hélène Perrin, Région Île-de-France