Statement in support of protecting Canadian science and researchers
The Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) supports the efforts of the Government of Canada to secure and protect Canadian science and researchers. IQC takes the protection of intellectual property very seriously and commits to cooperate with various agencies and organizations in support of National Security priorities.
IQC also commits to, and will continue to, educate staff and researchers about the opportunities, pitfalls, and boundaries of protecting Canadian science and intellectual property for the benefit of IQC, the University of Waterloo, and indeed, future generations.
News
How to deliver on the powerful promise of quantum computers
New tool created by IQC's Michele Mosca and Vlad Gheorghiu estimates real-world costs of quantum computing so businesses can become quantum ready
Battling quantum decoherence, one flat band at a time
Researchers have reported a novel material platform where flat bands universally emerge in a wide range of Transition Metal Dichalcogenide (TMD) compounds with many potential applications like manipulating properties of 2D magnetic materials through ion intercalation, which could lead to improvements and applications in areas such as memory storage technology, reconfigurable neural networks, and high-frequency sensors.
NIST’s Curved Neutron Beams Could Deliver Benefits Straight to Industry
Scientists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the University of Buffalo, IQC and other institutions have created the first neutron “Airy beam,” which has unusual capabilities that ordinary neutron beams do not.
Events
IQC seminar featuring Vincent Russo
Exploring Quantum Information with |toqito⟩
Location: QNC 2101
Operator Algebras and Quantum Information
Inaugural meeting of a new annual international conference series by The Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences held at the Institute for Quantum Computing.
Location: QNC 0101
ETSI/IQC Quantum Safe Cryptography Conference
Designed for members of the business, government, and research communities with a stake in cryptographic standardization, this forward-looking conference facilitates the knowledge exchange and collaboration required to transition cyber infrastructures and business practices to make them safe and resilient in an era with quantum computers.