Editor-in-ChiefMichelle Simmons, PhD Director, Centre for Quantum Computation & Comm Tech University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia
Michelle Simmons is the Director of Centre for Quantum Computation & Communication Technology at University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. As Director she oversees an interdisciplinary research group in both optical and silicon based quantum computation and its integration with a secure communications network. Their work focusses on developing both optical and silicon based quantum computer prototypes and repeater technologies for quantum communications. She and her team have developed a radical new technology for realizing atomically precise devices in silicon and germanium developing the world’s first single atom transistor and the thinnest conducting doped wires in silicon. They are currently working towards developing a scalable donor based silicon quantum computer. Associate EditorsAlmut Beige, PhD Associate Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy University of Leeds Leeds, United Kingdom
Almut Beige is the Head of the Theoretical Physics Group in the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Leeds, United Kingdom, where she moved in 2005 after working at Imperial College London, the University of Cambridge and the Max-Planck-Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany. Almut is most known for her work on open quantum systems with spontaneous photon emission. While being interested in the foundations of quantum physics, she also helped to establish measurements and dissipation as a tool for the efficient and robust manipulation of quantum information with a wide range of applications. Almut received her PhD from the University of Göttingen, Germany, in 1998. Dominic Berry, PhD Associate Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy Macquarie University Research Centre in Quantum Science and Technology Sydney, Australia Dominic Berry is an Associate Professor at Macquarie University. He has performed some of the foundational work in quantum algorithms for quantum simulation, pioneering the Trotter-Suzuki methods for quantum simulation in 2007, as well as introducing new approaches with exponential precision in 2014. He has also developed a range of adaptive techniques for phase estimation with highly nonclassical states, which have applications in precision metrology as well as quantum algorithms. Dominic Berry received his PhD at The University of Queensland (UQ) in 2002 and worked at Macquarie, UQ, and the Institute for Quantum Computing in Waterloo before returning to Macquarie in 2011 as a Future Fellow. Yu-Ao Chen, PhD Professor of Experimental Physics Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences University of Science and Technology Shanghai, People's Republic of China Yu-Ao Chen is a Professor of Experimental Physics at Hefei National Laboratory for Physical Sciences. His research interests include quantum information processing based on linear optics, multi-photon entanglement, quantum communication with linear optics and atomic ensembles, quantum memory, quantum simulation with ultra-cold atoms and optical lattices. Audrey Cottet, PhD Permanent CNRS Researcher Department de Physique de l'Ecole Normale Superieure Paris, France
Audrey Cottet is a permanent CNRS researcher at the Laboratoire Pierre Aigrain (LPA) of the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris (ENS Paris). She works on the theory of hybrid quantum electronic circuits. Her research interests include Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics with hybrid nanocircuits, spin-dependent transport in nanostructures, superconducting proximity effects and Majorana devices. She also has a strong experimental background since she performed an experimental PhD on Josephson circuits, which led to the first superconducting quantum bit with a microsecond lifetime (Quantronium).
Simon Devitt, PhD Lecturer, Centre for Quantum Software and Information (QSI) University of Technology, Sydney Sydney, Australia
Simon Devitt is a lecturer in quantum architectures at the Centre for Quantum Software and Information (QSI) at the University of Technology, Sydney. His research has focused on the design of practical large-scale systems architectures for quantum computing and communications. Simon's most recent work has focused largely on developing a software framework for large-scale, error-corrected machines, including methods to map high-level quantum circuits to machine level instructions and how these error-corrected circuits need to be optimised to reduce the resource load on quantum computing hardware. He is the founder of h-bar, a quantum consultancy firm that is a founding member of both the EU based Quantum World Association and the U.S. Quantum Industry Coalition.
Matthew G. House, PhD Senior Research Fellow Centre for Quantum Computation & CommTech University of New South Wales Sydney, Australia Matthew House is a Senior Research Fellow in Centre for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology at University of New South Wales. As a member of the atomic precision lithography team, his research focuses on cryogenic microwave control and measurement techniques for silicon spin qubits.
Sabrina Maniscalco, PhD Director, Professor, Dept. of Physics and Astronomy University of Turku Turku, Finland
Professor Sabrina Maniscalco is the leader of the Turku Quantum Technology Finland group, the Director of the Theoretical Physics laboratory at the University of Turku and the Vice-Director of the National Centre of Excellence Quantum Technologies Finland. She has a longstanding expertise on open quantum systems theory, specifically non-Markovian, and she has been investigating since several years foundational problems related to environment induced decoherence, dynamics of quantum correlations, non-equilibrium manybody physics, quantum simulation and more recently complex quantum networks. Kae Nemoto, PhD Professor of Quantum Information Sciences Group National Institute of Informatics Tokyo, Japan
Kae Nemoto is a Professor of Quantum Information Sciences group at NII. Her research interests and efforts are currently focused around the requirements for true quantum computation, the generation of optical nonlinearities, schemes for quantum computation and information processing, quantum/atom optics and quantum nonlinear dynamics and the foundations of quantum mechanics. Philip Walther, PhD Vice-Dean, Faculty of Physics, Quantum Optics, Quantum Nanophysics & Quantum Information Group University of Vienna Vienna, Austria Philip Walther is a Professor and Vice-Dean in the Faculty of Physics at University of Vienna, Austria. His research areas are quantum computing, quantum cloud computing, quantum simulation experiments, the investigation of quantum correlations as resource, and multi-photon generation and manipulation and light-matter interactions. Editorial Board MembersDavid Awschalom, PhD Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago Illinois, USA Michael Biercuk, PhD Quantum Control Laboratory, University of Sydney Sydney, Australia Paola Cappellaro, PhD Nuclear Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts, USA Andrew Childs, PhD Department of Computer Science and Institute for Advanced Computer Studies, University of Maryland Maryland, USA Klaus Ensslin, PhD Department of Physics, ETH Zurich Zurich, Switzerland Mark Eriksson, PhD Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison Wisconsin, USA Alessandro Fedrizzi, PhD Engineering and Physical Sciences, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, UK Austin Fowler, PhD Quantum Hardware Team, Google Inc California, USA
Jay Gambetta, PhD Theory of Quantum and Information Group, Thomas J. Watson Research Center IBM New York, USA Lloyd Hollenberg, PhD Centre for Quantum Computation & Communication Technology, University of Melbourne Melbourne, Australia Atac Imamoglu, PhD Department of Physics, ETH Zurich Zurich, Switzerland Ping Koy Lam, PhD Department of Quantum Science, Australian National University Canberra, Australia Daniel Loss, PhD Department of Physics, University of Basel Basel, Switzerland Charles Marcus, PhD Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen Copenhagen, Denmark Christopher Monroe, PhD Department of Physics, University of Maryland Maryland, USA Franco Nori, PhD RIKEN, Japan, and University of Michigan Michigan, USA Jeremy O'Brien, PhD School of Physics, University of Bristol Bristol, UK Tim Ralph, PhD Department of Physics, University of Queensland Queensland, Australia Robert J. Schoelkopf, PhD Department of Applied Physics, Yale University Connecticut, USA Jacob Taylor, PhD National Institute of Standards and Technology Maryland, USA Lieven Vandersypen, PhD Department of Quantum Nanoscience, Kavli Institute of Nanoscience Delft Delft, Netherlands Jelena Vuckovic, PhD Department of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University California, USA Jörg Wrachtrup, PhD Institute of Physics, University of Stuttgart Stuttgart, Germany
Amir Yacoby, PhD Department of Physics, Harvard University Massachusetts, USA Yoshihisa Yamamoto, PhD Applied Physics & Electrical Engineering, Stanford University California, USA
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