QuProCS
QUPROCS QUANTUM PROBES FOR COMPLEX SYSTEMS

  • I.P.: Roberta Zambrini
  • Partners: Turku Univesrtity, Finland. University of Oxford, UK. University of Strathclyde, UK. Albert-Ludwigs Universitaet Freiburg, Germany. Universitá degli Studi di Milano, Italy. Universitat de les Illes Balears, Spain. University of Science and Technology of China
  • Fecha de inicio: 1 de Abril de 2015
  • Fecha de final: 31 de Marzo de 2018

We are on the verge of a new scientific and technological era as the first quantum simulators able to investigate physical systems that cannot be studied classically are about to be built in the laboratories. Controlling and probing complex quantum systems is of paramount importance for the implementation of these devices.
Quantum simulators are controllable complex quantum systems that emulate the behaviour of other quantum systems
whose properties cannot be easily tested. While several models of quantum simulators are currently under construction, the development of effective probing techniques is still lagging behind, despite their crucial role. In most of the quantum simulator experiments measurement techniques are invasive and destructive, destroying not only the very quantum
properties from which the simulator stems, but often also the quantum system itself.
QuProCS works on the development of a radically new approach to probe complex quantum systems for quantum simulations, based on the quantification and optimisation of the information that can be extracted by an immersed quantum probe as opposed to a classical one.
The team will theoretically investigate and experimentally implement quantum information probes to detect and characterise quantum correlations, quantum phase transitions, transport properties, and nonequilibrium phenomena in ultracold gases.
By a shift in perspective to a complementary viewpoint, we will at the same time investigate experimentally, in a quantum optical platform, how changing the properties of the environment via reservoir engineering modifies the behaviour of the quantum probe. We will develop optimal probing strategies to read out and benchmark quantum simulators, thus providing the most crucial ingredient for commercial devices.

Investigadores

  • Roberta Zambrini

    Roberta Zambrini

  • Gian Luca Giorgi

    Gian Luca Giorgi

  • Fernando Galve

    Fernando Galve

Publicaciones recientes

Synchronization and collective phenomena in quantum dissipative systems

Cabot, Albert (supervisors: Zambrini, Roberta; Giorgi, Gian Luca)
PhD Thesis (2021)

Local vs global master equation with common and separate baths: superiority of the global approach in partial secular approximation

Cattaneo, Marco; Giorgi, Gian Luca; Maniscalco, Sabrina; Zambrini, Roberta
New Journal of Physics 21, 113045 (2019)

Quantum synchronization in dimer atomic lattices

Cabot, Albert; Giorgi, Gian Luca; Galve, Fernando; Zambrini, Roberta
Physical Review Letters 123, 023604 (1-6) (2019)

Unveiling noiseless clusters in complex quantum networks

Cabot, Albert; Galve, Fernando; Eguíluz, Victor; Klemm, Konstantin; Maniscalco, Sabrina; Zambrini, Roberta
npj Quantum Information 57, 4 (2018)

Quantum Fluctuation Theorems for Arbitrary Environments: Adiabatic and Nonadiabatic Entropy Production

Manzano, G.;Horowitz, J.M.; Parrondo, J.M.R.
Physical Review X 8, 031037 (2018)

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