This workshop will explore questions around the testing of quantum devices. This includes different models for testing, such as the single- and multi-device models, classical or limited quantum verifiers, and information-theoretic security versus computational assumptions. Workshop themes encompass the foundations of quantum mechanics, classical and quantum cryptography (device independence, delegated computation), and complexity theory (classical and quantum probabilistically checkable proofs).
The workshop is being live streamed on our website. Full participation (including the capacity to ask questions) will be available via Zoom webinar.
Scott Aaronson (University of Texas at Austin), Dorit Aharonov (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Gorjan Alagic (QuICS, University of Maryland), Ehud Altman (UC Berkeley), Anurag Anshu (Institute for Quantum Computing), Itai Arad (Technion), Rotem Arnon-Friedman (UC Berkeley), Daniel J. Bernstein (University of Illinois at Chicago and Ruhr University Bochum), Rainer Blatt (University of Innsbruck), Robin Blume-Kohout (Sandia National Labs), Dan Boneh (Stanford University), Adam Bouland (UC Berkeley), Zvika Brakerski (Weizmann Institute of Science), Fernando Brandao (Caltech), Sergey Bravyi (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center), Alessandro Chiesa (UC Berkeley), Andrew Childs (University of Maryland), Isaac Chuang (MIT), Ignacio Cirac (Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik), Andrea Wei Coladangelo (California Institute of Technology), Matthew Coudron (University of Waterloo), Elizabeth Crosson (University of New Mexico), David DiVincenzo (RWTH Aachen), Yfke Dulek (QuSoft), Vedran Dunjko (University of Leiden), Kirsten Eisentraeger (Penn State), Jens Eisert (Freie Universität Berlin), Andreas Elben (Austrian Academy of Sciences), Joseph Emerson (IQC, University of Waterloo, and Quantum Benchmark Inc.), Di Fang (UC Berkeley), Bill Fefferman (University of Chicago), Sanjam Garg (UC Berkeley), Sevag Gharibian (University of Padderborn), András Pál Gilyén (Caltech), David Gosset (University of Waterloo), Daniel Gottesman (Perimeter Institute), Alex Bredariol Grilo (CWI and QuSoft), David Gross (University of Cologne), Sean Hallgren (Pennsylvania State University), Patrick Hayden (Stanford University), Martin Head-Gordon (UC Berkeley), Nicholas Hunter-Jones (Perimeter Institute), Sandra Irani (UC Irvine), Zhengfeng Ji (University of Technology Sydney), Elham Kashefi (University of Edinburgh), Iordanis Kerenidis (CNRS - Université Paris Diderot), Robin Kothari (Microsoft Research), Greg Kuperberg (UC Davis), Tanja Lange (Technische Universiteit Eindhoven), Debbie Leung (University of Waterloo), Lin Lin (UC Berkeley), Yi-kai Liu (NIST/University of Maryland), Guang-Hao Low (Microsoft Research), Urmila Mahadev (Microsoft Research), Peter Manohar (Carnegie Mellon University), Nicholas Mayhall (Virginia Tech), Saeed Mehraban (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Tony Metger (Caltech), Joel Moore (UC Berkeley), Tomoyuki Morimae (Kyoto University), Omer Paneth (Tel Aviv University), Anna Pappa (Free University of Berlin), Alexander Poremba (Caltech), Prasad Raghavendra (UC Berkeley), Ben Reichardt (University of Southern California), Siobhan Roberts (New York Times/ Simons Institute Journalist in Residence), Miklos Santha (Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7), Christian Schaffner (University of Amsterdam), Norbert Schuch (Max-Planck Institute of Quantum Optics), Kanav Setia (Dartmouth College), Omri Shmueli (Tel Aviv University), William Slofstra (NIST & University of Maryland), Jalex Stark (Jane Street), Barbara Terhal (Delft University of Technology), Dominique Unruh (University of Tartu), Umesh Vazirani (UC Berkeley), Thomas Vidick (California Institute of Technology), Birgitta Whaley (UC Berkeley), Alec White (Caltech), James Whitfield (Dartmouth College), Xiaodi Wu (University of Maryland), Norman Yao (UC Berkeley), Penghui Yao (Nanjing University), Henry Yuen (University of Toronto), Mike Zaletel (UC Berkeley), Mark Zhandry (Princeton University)