Event Details
May 5-10, 2024
The Institute of Mathematics at the University of Granada will host the "Towards Infinite Dimension and Beyond in Quantum Information" workshop at the University of Granada (IMAG) in Spain, from May 5 - 10, 2024.
Functional analysis is the field of mathematics dealing with linear structures, their geometry and topology, and usually in infinite dimensions. As such, it is hardly surprising that it should provide the language to describe quantum mechanics, which it has done from the historical beginnings of the latter (cue: Hilbert spaces, etc). But the flux of mathematical ideas is not unidirectional: on the contrary, operator algebras, operator spaces and operator systems owe their motivations to quantum physics.
Exhiliaratingly, for mathematicians and physicists alike, this mutual fertilization continues a century on from the creation of quantum mechanics, and is currently most strongly felt in certain questions of quantum information theory. Our workshop will explore the most recent interactions of functional analysis and quantum information.
More information can be found on the BIRS website
ONLINE ATTENDANCE
The talks of this workshop will be broadcast via Google Meet, and they can be followed at https://meet.google.com/wok-qckq-rpf
SCHEDULE
Further details, including abstracts of the talks, can be found on the BIRS website.
Organizers
- Andreas Winter (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
- Ángela Capel (University of Cambridge)
- Nilanjana Datta (University of Cambridge)
- Ludovico Lami (University of Amsterdam)
CONFIRMED PARTICIPANTS
- Gerardo Adesso (University of Nottingham)
- Guillaume Aubrun (Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1)
- Simon Becker (ETHZ)
- Bjarne Bergh (Cambridge University)
- Andreas Bluhm (Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS)
- Eric Carlen (Rutgers University)
- Ulysse Chabaud (INRIA/École Normale Supérieure)
- Jens Eisert (Free University Berlin)
- Marco Fanizza (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
- Niklas Galke (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona)
- Li Gao (Wuhan University)
- Vittorio Giovannetti (Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa)
- Filippo Girardi (University of Amsterdam)
- Saikat Guha (University of Arizona)
- Masahito Hayashi (Chinese University of Hong Kong - Shenzhen)
- Fumio Hiai (Tohoku University)
- Michael Jabbour (Université libre de Bruxelles)
- Anna Jencova (Slovak Academy of Sciences)
- Marius Junge (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
- Francesca La Piana (University of Oslo)
- Nicholas LaRacuente (Indiana University Bloomington)
- Seth Lloyd (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Francesco Anna Mele (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa)
- Milan Mosonyi (Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
- Magdalena Musat (University of Copenhagen)
- Tim Möbus (Technische Universitat München)
- Mizanur Rahaman (École Normale Supérieure de Lyon)
- Cambyse Rouze (Inria - Institut Polytechnique de Paris)
- Robert Salzmann (ENS Lyon)
- Stanislaw Szarek (Case Western Reserve University)
- Ryuji Takagi (University of Tokyo)
- Salvatore Tirone (University of Amsterdam)
- Anna Vershynina (University of Houston)
- Reinhard Werner (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
- Benjamin Yadin (University of Siegen, Germany)
- Hayata Yamasaki (University of Tokyo)
- Haonan Zhang (University of South Carolina)
- Quntao Zhuang (University of Sourthern California Los Angeles)
- Vjosa Blakaj (Technical University of Munich)
- Pablo Costa (Technical University of Munich)
- Paul Gondolf (University of Tuebingen)
- Zahra Khanian (Technical University of Munich)
- Jan Kochanowski (Télécom Paris)
- Rupert Levene (University College Dublin)
- Salvatore Oliviero (Scuola Normale Superiore)
- Junqiao Randy (CWI)
- Jacopo Rizzo (Freie Universität Berlin)
- Mikael Rordam (University of Copenhagen)
- Farzin Salek (Technical University of Munich)
- Alexander Holevo (Steklov Mathematical Institute)
- Maksim Shirokov (Steklov Mathematical Institute)
- Juan Silverio Martínez (University of Granada)
- Miguel Martín (University of Granada)