Schedule

 

 

Talk Titles (Scheduled for 30+15)


Monday, February 5, Morning

Senthil Todadri, MIT: Fractional quantum Hall without magnetic fields: realizations, proximate phases, and phase transitions

Amir Yacoby, Harvard University: The Hidden Physics of Josephson Junctions

Radu Coldea, University of Oxford: Exploration of a rare-earth candidate Kitaev quantum magnet


 Monday, February 5, Afternoon

Cristian Batista, University of Tennessee: Quantum Phase Transitions of Extended Kitaev Models

Ania Jayich, UCSB: TBA


 Tuesday, February 6, Morning

Danna Freedman, MIT: Chemistry for Quantum

Arzhang Ardavan, University of Oxford: Quantum error detection and correction using hyperfine-coupled nuclear qudits

Martin Zwierlein, MIT: Heat transport and fermion pairing in strongly interacting Fermi gases

 

Tuesday, February 6, Afternoon

Pedram Roushan, Google: Dynamics of magnetization in Heisenberg spin chains

Mallika Randeria, MIT Lincoln Laboratory: Dephasing in fluxonium from coherent quantum phase slips

 

Wednesday, February 7, Morning

Ali Yazdani, Princeton University: Topological Quantum States for Quantum Technologies

Ehud Altman, UC Berkeley: TBA

Ming Yi, Rice University: TBA

Leslie Schoop, Princeton University: TBA

 

Thursday, February 8, Morning

Shan Wu, Santa Clara University: Scattering on Magnetic Resistance Switching Material

Qimiao Si, Rice University: Strange metals for topology and quantum entanglement

Vedika Khemani, Stanford University: The many-body physics of (good) LDPC error correcting codes

 

Thursday, February 8, Afternoon: 

Jason Alicea, California Institute of Technology: Measurement-altered quantum criticality

Suzanne Stemmer, UCSB: Edge mode transport in the topological insulator cadmium arsenide

 

Friday, February 9, Morning

Richard Fletcher , MIT: Quantum Hall physics in the quantum Foucault pendulum

Andrea Young, UCSB: Fractional quantum Hall in van der Waals heterostructures

Alex Frano, UCSD: TBA

Ruben Verresen, Harvard University: Two new routes to topological order: Hamiltonians vs measurement