QIM V Quantum Information and Measurement: Quantum Technologies - Rome, 4-6 April 2019 - Quantum Information Lab
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Contents PROGRAM AT A GLANCE ............................................................................................................................... 4 FULL PROGRAM ............................................................................................................................................. 8 THURSDAY 4 APRIL .................................................................................................................................... 8 FRIDAY 5 APRIL ........................................................................................................................................ 10 SATURDAY 6 APRIL................................................................................................................................... 13 POSTER SESSION I – THURSDAY 4 APRIL ................................................................................................. 20 POSTER SESSION II – FRIDAY 5 APRIL ...................................................................................................... 25 INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS ................................................................................................................ 30 GENERAL INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................. 31 SOCIAL EVENT .............................................................................................................................................. 32 ORGANIZERS & SUPPORTERS ...................................................................................................................... 33 SPONSORS ................................................................................................................................................... 35 VENUE .......................................................................................................................................................... 36
Program Chairs Fabio Sciarrino, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy David Lucas, University of Oxford, UK Chairs Irfan Siddiqi, University of California Berkeley, United States Nicolas Treps, Sorbonne Université, France Ian Walmsley, Imperial College London, UK Scientific Committee Gerardo Adesso, University of Nottingham, UK Konrad Banaszek, Uniwersytet Warszawski, Poland Marco Barbieri, Università Roma Tre, Italy Angelo Bassi, University of Trieste, Italy Kai Bongs, Universität Hamburg, Germany Antoine Browaeys, Institut d’Optique, France Eleni Diamanti, Sorbonne Université, France Claude Fabre, Sorbonne Université, France Radim Filip, Palacky University, Czech Republic Stefan Filipp, IBM Research, Switzerland Jonathan Home, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Mirko Lobino, Griffith University, Australia Jonathan Matthews, University of Bristol, UK Mauro Paternostro, University of Belfast, UK Rinaldo Trotta, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Giuseppe Vallone, Università di Padova, Italy Stephen Patrick Walborn, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Philip Walther, University of Vienna, Austria Lijian Zhang, Nanjing University, China Local Organizing Committee Gonzalo Carvacho, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Giuliana Pensa, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Nicolò Spagnolo, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy
PROGRAM AT A GLANCE Thursday 4 April 08.30-09.30 Registration Aula Magna Rettorato 09.30-09.45 Welcome 09.45-10.30 J. Gambetta 10.30-11.00 Coffee break 11.00-11.45 J.-W. Pan 11.45-12.30 I. Bloch 12.30-13.45 Lunch break Aula Magna Rettorato Aula Magna Regina Elena Aula Organi Collegiali 13.45-14.15 A. G. White H. Eisenberg G. M. Tino 14.15-14.30 A. Zavatta M. Malik V. S. Malinovsky 14.30-14.45 M. Erhard M. Stobinska V. G. Lucivero 14.45-15.15 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato 15.15-16.00 N. Mavalvala 16.00-17.30 Special session on National Quantum Initiatives Poster Area 17.30-18.30 Poster session I 19.30-23.00 Social Event - Terrazza Caffarelli
Friday 5 April Aula Magna Rettorato 09.00-09.45 C. Silberhorn 09.45-10.30 M. Aspelmeyer 10.30-11.15 Coffee break 11.15-12.00 D. Leibfried 12.00-12.45 D. Jaksch 12.45-14.15 Lunch break Aula Magna Rettorato Aula Magna Regina Elena Aula Organi Collegiali 14.15-14.45 C. Lu P. Leek S. Ducci 14.45-15.00 G. Ferrini D. Farufnik A. Hayat 15.00-15.15 J. Renema G. Zheng C. K. Dass 15.15-16.00 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato Aula Magna Regina Elena Aula Organi Collegiali 16.00-16.30 S. Tanzilli L. Fallani H. de Riedmatten 16.30-16.45 J. D. Witmer V. Lienhard J. Raskop 16.45-17.00 R. Santagati C. Sias W. Kuo 17.00-17.15 F. Mondain L. Chakhmakhchyan M. A. Padron Brito 17.15-17.30 I. Esmaeil Zadeh A. D’Errico D. Gangloff Poster Area 17.30-19.00 Poster session II & refreshment
Saturday 6 April Aula 3 Aula 4 Aula Cabibbo Aula 7 09.00-09.30 D. Zajac V. Giovannetti P. Senellart R. Thew 09.30-09.45 O. V. Tikhonova R. Patel L. Qiu S. Kucera 09.45-10.00 R. Nair D. Rusca M. Carlesso C. Autebert 10.00-10.15 I. Gianani I. Agresti Massimiliano Rossi S. Santra 10.15-10.30 Matteo Rossi M. Avesani R. Stockill A. Tiranov 10.30-11.15 Coffee break Aula 3 Aula 4 Aula Cabibbo Aula 7 11.15-11.45 P. Villoresi A. Furusawa R. Osellame C. J. Ballance 11.45-12.15 T. Jennewein V. Parigi A. Laing G. Pagano 12.15-12.30 F. Bouchard R. Filip M. Kues C. Wunderlich 12.30-12.45 T. Muller J. Gniesmer B. Bell T. Zibold 12.45-13.00 S. Hermans M. Walschaers C. Taballione M. Marinelli 13.00-13.15 D. Tedeschi J. Sperling T. Giordani M. A. Ciampini 13.15-14.30 Lunch break
Aula 3 Aula 4 Aula Cabibbo Aula 7 14.30-15.00 R. Lo Franco A. Perdomo M. Atature N. Huntemann 15.00-15.15 L. Maccone J. J. Wallman N. Fabbri D. Braun 15.15-15.30 D. Naik L. Rozema M. Woolley M. Reimer 15.30-15.45 A. De Pasquale M. Gessner L. Magrini V. Ansari 15.45-16.00 A. Larrouy A. V. Sergienko J. Chen X. Xiang 16.00-16.30 Coffee break Aula 3 Aula 4 Aula Cabibbo 16.30-16.45 Y. Xiang M. Bondani D. Elkouss 16.45-17.00 X. Guo G. S. Thekkadath 17.00-17.15 S. Ates M. Parniak R. K. Hanley 17.15-17.30 S. Gao J. Bodey L. Banchi 17.30-17.45 L. Mancino Aula Cabibbo 17.45-18.00 Concluding Remarks Plenary speakers = 40+5 min Invited speakers = 25+5 min Oral contributions: 12+3 min Poster sessions = 60-90 min
FULL PROGRAM THURSDAY 4 APRIL 08.30-09.30 Registration 09.30-09.45 Aula Magna Rettorato - Welcome Aula Magna Rettorato - T1A • Plenary Session I 09.45-10.30 T1A.1 - Benchmarking NISQ-era Quantum Processors Jay Gambetta, IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA 10.30-11.00 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato - T2A • Plenary Session II 11.00-11.45 T2A.1 - Quantum Leap: From Tests of Quantum Foundations to New Quantum Technologies Jian-Wei Pan, University of Science and Technology of China, China 11.45-12.30 F1A.1 - Realizing Feynman’s Dream of a Quantum Simulator Immanuel Bloch, Max-Planck-Institut fur Quantenoptik and Ludwig- Maximilians-Universität München, Germany 12.30-13.45 Lunch break Aula Magna Rettorato - T3A • Quantum Information I 13.45-14.15 T3A.1 - Communicating via Ignorance & Imaging via Counting Andrew G. White, University of Queensland, Australia 14.15-14.30 T3A.2 - Macroscopic entangled states by delocalized single-photon addition Alessandro Zavatta, Istituto Nazionale di Ottica, Italy 14.30-14.45 T3A.3 - Quantum Information Experiments with Multiple Photons in One and High-Dimensions: Concepts and Experiments Manuel Erhard, IQOQI Vienna, Austria Aula Magna Regina Elena - T3B • Quantum Optics 13.45-14.15 T3B.1 - Generating Multi-photon Entangled States from a Single Deterministic Single-photon Source Hagai Eisenberg, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel Rome, 4-6 April 2019 8
14.15-14.30 T3B.2 - Quantifying High-Dimensional Entanglement with only Two Measurement Settings Mehul Malik, Heriot-Watt University, UK, and IQOQI Vienna, Austria 14.30-14.45 T3B.3 - Quantum interference enables constant-time quantum information processing Magdalena Stobinska, University of Warsaw, Poland Aula Organi Collegiali - T3C • Atomic Quantum Sensors 13.45-14.15 T3C.1 - Atomic Quantum Sensors for Precision Gravitational Physics Guglielmo M. Tino, Università degli Studi di Firenze, and INFN, Italy 14.15-14.30 T3C.2 - High-precision atom interferometry using optimal quantum control Vladimir S. Malinovsky, US Army Research Laboratory, USA 14.30-14.45 T3C.3 - A femtotesla quantum-noise-limited pulsed gradiometer at finite fields Vito Giovanni Lucivero, Princeton University, USA 14.45-15.15 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato - T4A • Plenary Session III 15.15-16.00 T4A.1 - Gravitational Wave Detectors Nergis Mavalvala, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Aula Magna Rettorato -T4B 16.00-17.30 Special Session on National Quantum Initiatives Organized in collaboration with and co-sponsored by the OSA Quantum Computing and Communication Technical Group Introduction and presentation of the OSA Quantum Computing and Communication Technical Group, Gregory Quarles, OSA Chief Scientist Round table Gregory Quarles, OSA Chief Scientist (Session Chair) Yasuhiko Arakawa, University of Tokyo, Japan Tommaso Calarco, University of Ulm, Germany Claire Cramer, U.S. Department of Energy, USA Thomas Jennewein, University of Waterloo, Canada Jian-Wei Pan, University of Science and Technology of China Ian Walmsley, Imperial College London, UK Andrew G. White, The University of Queensland, Australia 17.30-18.30 Poster Area - T5A • Poster Session I 19.30-23.00 Social Event - Terrazza Caffarelli Rome, 4-6 April 2019 9
FRIDAY 5 APRIL Aula Magna Rettorato - F1A • Plenary Session IV 09.00-09.45 T2A.2 - Multi-dimensional Quantum Systems Based on Integrated Optics and Pulsed Light Christine Silberhorn, Paderborn University, Germany 09.45-10.30 F1A.2 - Quantum Controlling Levitated Solids: A Novel Probe for the Gravity- quantum Interface Markus Aspelmeyer, Universitat Wien, Austria 10.30-11.15 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato - F2A • Plenary Session V 11.15-12.00 F2A.1 - Quantum Control of Atomic and Molecular Ions at NIST Dietrich Leibfried, National Institute of Standards & Technology, USA 12.00-12.45 F2A.2 - Quantum Simulation Using Hybrid Computing Dieter Jaksch, University of Oxford, UK 12.45-14.15 Lunch break Aula Magna Rettorato - F3A • Boson Sampling 14.15-14.45 F3A.1 - Toward “quantum supremacy” with photons Chaoyang Lu, University of Science and Technology of China, China 14.45-15.00 F3A.2 - Probabilistic Fault-Tolerant Universal Quantum Computation and Sampling Problems in Continuous Variables Giulia Ferrini, Chalmers, Sweden 15.00-15.15 F3A.3 - Boson Sampling with Linear Loss is Classically Simulable Jelmer Renema, Universiteit Twente, Netherlands Aula Magna Regina Elena - F3B • Quantum Simulation and Computing I 14.15-14.45 F3B.1 - Multilayer Coaxial Superconducting Circuits with Integrated 3D Wiring Peter Leek, ETH Zuerich, Switzerland 14.45-15.00 F3B.2 - Spin ensembles in diamond for sensing and many-body physics Demitry Farufnik, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem, Israel 15.00-15.15 F3B.3 - Embedding Silicon Spin Qubits in Superconducting Circuits Guoji Zheng, Delft Univ. of Technology and QuTech, Netherlands Rome, 4-6 April 2019 10
Aula Organi Collegiali - F3C • Single-photon Sources I 14.15-14.45 F3C.1 - Generation and manipulation of quantum frequency states of light with AlGaAs chips Sara Ducci, Université Paris Diderot, France 14.45-15.00 F3C.2 - Semiconductor-Superconductor Quantum Optoelectronics Alex Hayat, Technion, Israel 15.00-15.15 F3C.3 - Quantum Calligraphy: Writing Single-Photon Emitters in a Two- Dimensional Materials Platform Chandriker K. Dass, Air Force Research Laboratory and KBRwyle, USA 15.15-16.00 Coffee break Aula Magna Rettorato - F4A • Integrated Photonics I 16.00-16.30 F4A.1 - Synchronizing Remote Quantum Network Stations Using an All- optical Method Sebastien Tanzilli, CNRS, Université Côte d’Azur, France 16.30-16.45 F4A.2 - Quantum dynamics of a few-photon microwave parametric oscillator Jeremy D. Witmer, Stanford University, USA 16.45-17.00 F4A.3 - Hamiltonian learning for the estimation of magnetic fields with nanoscale quantum sensors Raffaele Santagati, QETLabs, University of Bristol, UK 17.00-17.15 F4A.4 - Chip-based squeezing at a telecom wavelength François Mondain, CNRS UMR 7010 and Université Côte d'Azur, France 17.15-17.30 F4A.5 - Scalable quantum optics with nanowires Iman Esmaeil Zadeh, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands Aula Magna Regina Elena - F4B • Quantum Simulation and Computing II 16.00-16.30 F4B.1 - Engineering synthetic quantum systems with ultracold atoms and light Leonardo Fallani, European Lab for Non-Linear Spectroscopy, Italy 16.30-16.45 F4B.2 - Experimental realization of a bosonic version of the Su-Schrieffer- Heeger (SSH) model with Rydberg atoms Vincent Lienhard, Institut d'Optique Graduate School, France 16.45-17.00 F4B.3 - Towards a new atom-ion experiment in Italy Carlo Sias, INRIM and LENS, Italy 17.00-17.15 S4D.1 - Simulating Universal Gaussian Circuits with Linear Optics Levon Chakhmakhchyan, University of Bristol, UK Rome, 4-6 April 2019 11
17.15-17.30 F4B.5 - Topological quantum walks in the two-dimensional space of the transverse momentum of light, Alessio D'Errico, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy Aula Organi Collegiali - F4C • Light-atom Interfaces 16.00-16.30 F4C.1 - Multiplexed Spin Photon Interfaces in Solid State Quantum Memories Hugues de Riedmatten, ICFO -Institut de Ciencies Fotoniques and ICREA, Spain 16.30-16.45 F4C.2 - Quantum optics of cold atomic ensembles trapped in evanescent fields Jérémy Raskop, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, France 16.45-17.00 F4C.3 - Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics with Dressed States of a Superconducting Artificial Atom Watson Kuo, Department of Physics, National Chung Hsing University, Taiwan 17.00-17.15 F4C.4 - Storage of single photons in a highly nonlinear medium based on Rydberg atoms María Auxiliadora Padrón Brito, ICFO - The Institute of Photonic Sciences, Spain. 17.15-17.30 F4C.5 - Coherent excitation of a spin wave in an optically cooled nuclear ensemble Dorian Gangloff, Cambridge University, UK 17.30-19.00 Poster Area - F5A • Poster Session II & refreshment offered by TOPTICA Photonics Rome, 4-6 April 2019 12
SATURDAY 6 APRIL Aula 3 - S1A • Quantum information II 09.00-09.30 S4B.1 - Two Qubit Control of Single Electron Spin Qubits in Silicon David Zajac, IBM Research Center, USA 09.30-09.45 S1A.2 - Selection and Amplification of Orbital Momentum Modes of Bright Squeezed Vacuum Light for High Resolution Quantum Measurements Olga V. Tikhonova, M. V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russian Federation 09.45-10.00 S1A.3 - Using Entanglement for Quantum-Optimal Loss Estimation Ranjith Nair, National University of Singapore, Singapore 10.00-10.15 S1A.4 - Robust reconstruction of the joint spectral phase of two photons Ilaria Gianani, Università di Roma Tre, Italy 10.15-10.30 S1A.5 - Restoring Heisenberg scaling in noisy quantum metrology by monitoring the environment, Matteo Rossi, University of Turku, Finland Aula 4 - S1B • Quantum Protocols 09.00-09.30 S1B.1 - Machine Learning of Quantum Properties Vittorio Giovannetti, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Italy 09.30-09.45 S1B.2 - An experimental quantum Bernoulli factory Raj Patel, Griffith University, Australia, & University of Oxford, UK 09.45-10.00 S1B.3 - Quantum random number generation with partially characterised devices based on bounded energy Davide Rusca, Université de Genève, Switzerland 10.00-10.15 S1B.4 - Quantum violation of an Instrumental test Iris Agresti, La Sapienza University of Rome, Italy 10.15-10.30 S1B.5 - Seedless ultrafast source-device independent quantum random number generator Marco Avesani, Information Engineering, University of Padova, Italy Aula Cabibbo - S1C • Quantum Technology I 09.00-09.30 S1C.1 - Generation of quantum light in a photon-number superposition Pascale Senellart, CNRS-C2N, France 09.30-09.45 S1C.2 - Optical Back-action Evading Measurement of Mechanical Oscillator Liu Qiu, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland Rome, 4-6 April 2019 13
09.45-10.00 S1C.3 - Current tests of collapse models: How far can we push the limits of quantum mechanics? Matteo Carlesso, University of Trieste and INFN, Italy 10.00-10.15 S1C.4 - Quantum Measurement and Control of a Mechanical Resonator Massimiliano Rossi, University of Copenhagen, Denmark 10.15-10.30 S1C.5 - Quantum noise limited microwave to optics conversion Robert Stockill, TU Delft, Netherlands Aula 7 - S1D • Quantum Networks I 09.00-09.30 S1D.1 - Entanglement-Based Quantum Networking Rob Thew, Université de Genève, Switzerland 09.30-09.45 S1D.2 - Atom-to-Photon Quantum State Mapping into the Telecom Range Stephan Kucera, Saarland Univ., Germany 09.45-10.00 S1D.3 - Direct measurement of the recovery time of SNSPDs and its application for quantum communication Claire Autebert, Université de Genève - GAP, Switzerland 10.00-10.15 S1D.4 - Quantum memory decoherence-mitigating architecture for quantum repeaters Siddhartha Santra, US Army Research Laboratory, USA 10.15-10.30 S1D.5 - Towards broadband optical spin-wave quantum memory Alexey Tiranov, University of Geneva, Switzerland 10.30-11.15 Coffee break Aula 3 - S2A • Quantum Communication 11.15-11.45 S2A.1 - Space Quantum Communication with Higher Orbits Paolo Villoresi, Università di Padova, and INFN - sezione di Padova, Italy 11.45-12.15 S2A.2 - Towards a Global Quantum Communication Network Using Ground to Space Quantum Links Thomas Jennewein, University of Waterloo, Canada 12.15-12.30 S2A.3 - High-Dimensional Quantum Cryptography using Twisted Photons: from the Laboratory to realistic conditions Frederic Bouchard, University of Ottawa, Canada 12.30-12.45 S2A.4 - Quantum teleportation using coherent emission from telecom C-band quantum dots Tina Muller, Quantum information group, Toshiba Research Europe, UK Rome, 4-6 April 2019 14
12.45-13.00 S2A.5 - Entanglement between Nitrogen-Vacancy spin in diamond and Telecom frequency photon Sophie Hermans, TU Delft, Netherlands 13.00-13.15 S2A.6 - All-photonic quantum teleportation and entanglement swapping using on-demand solid-state quantum emitters Davide Tedeschi, Università di Roma La Sapienza, Italy Aula 4 - S2B • Continuous-variables Quantum Information 11.15-11.45 S2B.1 - A time-domain multiplexed measurement-based large-scale optical quantum computer Akira Furusawa, University of Tokyo, Japan 11.45-12.15 S2B.2 - Quantum Frequency Comb for Quantum Complex Networks Valentina Parigi, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, France 12.15-12.30 S2B.3 - Quantum non-Gaussian multiphoton light Radim Filip, Palacky University, Czech Republic 12.30-12.45 S2B.4 - Frequency-dependent squeezed states for gravitational-wave detection through EPR entanglement Jan Gniesmer, Institut für Laserphysik, Germany 12.45-13.00 S2B.5 - Photon-Subtracted Continuous-Variable Graph States Mattia Walschaers, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, France 13.00-13.15 S4D.2 - Quasiprobability Representation for Quantum Correlations and Measurements Jan Sperling, University of Paderborn, Germany Aula Cabibbo S2C • Integrated Photonics II 11.15-11.45 S2C.1 - Manipulation of quantum information in fs-laser-written photonic circuits Roberto Osellame, IFN -CNR, Italy 11.45-12.15 S2C.2 - Quantum simulations in integrated photonics Anthony Laing, University of Bristol, UK 12.15-12.30 S2C.3 - High-dimensional one-way quantum processing enabled by optical d- level cluster states Michael Kues, University of Glasgow, UK, & INRS-EMT, Canada 12.30-12.45 S2C.4 - Interference in multi-photon emission from photon pair sources with shaped spectral amplitudes Bryn Bell, Physics, University of Oxford, UK Rome, 4-6 April 2019 15
12.45-13.00 S2C.5 - Si3N4 Reconfigurable Linear Optical Network for Quantum Information Processing Caterina Taballione, University of Twente, Netherlands 13.00-13.15 S2C.6 - Validation of multi-photon interference in photonic boson sampling Taira Giordani, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy Aula 7 - S2D • Quantum Simulation and Computing III 11.15-11.45 S2D.1 - Networking Trapped-ion Quantum Computers Christopher J. Ballance, University of Oxford, UK 11.45-12.15 S2D.2 - Quantum Computing and Simulation with Trapped Atomic Ions Guido Pagano, University of Maryland, USA 12.15-12.30 S2D.3 - Quantum Computing with Radiofrequency-driven Trapped Atomic Ions Christof Wunderlich, Universität Siegen, Germany 12.30-12.45 S2D.4 - Spatial entanglement and Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering in a Bose- Einstein condensate Tilman Zibold, University of Basel, Switzerland 12.45-13.00 S2D.5 - Repeated multi-qubit readout and feedback with a mixed-species trapped-ion register Matteo Marinelli, ETH Zurich, Switzerland 13.00-13.15 S2D.6 - Experimental Quantum Darwinism simulator using photonic cluster states Mario Arnolfo Ciampini, Univ. Vienna, Austria, & La Sapienza Univ. of Rome, Italy 13.15-14.30 Lunch break Aula 3 - S3A • Quantum Measurements 14.30-15.00 S3A.1 - Indistinguishability as a quantum information resource by localized measurements Rosario Lo Franco, Università degli Studi di Palermo, Italy 15.00-15.15 S3A.2 - Quantum measurements of time Lorenzo Maccone, Università degli Studi di Pavia, and INFN, Italy 15.15-15.30 S3A.3 - Airborne and underground matter-wave interferometers: geodesy, navigation and general relativity Devang Naik, Institut d'Optique - CNRS, France 15.30-15.45 S3A.4 - The quantum measurement problem: a dynamical approach Antonella De Pasquale, Physics and Astronomy, Univ. of Florence, Italy Rome, 4-6 April 2019 16
15.45-16.00 S3A.5 - Quantum sensing using Rydberg atoms Arthur Larrouy, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, France Aula 4 - S3B • Quantum Information III 14.30-15.00 S3B.1 - Quantum-Assisted Machine Learning in Near-Term Quantum Devices Alejandro Perdomo, Zapata Computing, USA 15.00-15.15 S3B.2 - Characterizing large-scale quantum devices Joel J. Wallman, University of Waterloo, and Quantum Benchmark Inc., Canada 15.15-15.30 S3B.3 - Experimental Entanglement of Temporal Orders Lee Rozema, University of Vienna, Austria 15.30-15.45 S3B.4 - Sensitivity Limits for Multiparameter Quantum Metrology Manuel Gessner, QSTAR, INO-CNR, and LENS, Italy, & École Normale Supérieure, France 15.45-16.00 S3B.5 - Joint Entanglement Between Topology and Polarization Ensures Noise- Resistant Quantum Information Processing Alexander V. Sergienko, Boston University, USA Aula Cabibbo - S3C • Quantum Technology II 14.30-15.00 S3C.1 - Solid-state quantum interfaces of spins and photons Mete Atature, Cambridge University, UK 15.00-15.15 S3C.2 - Optimal control of diamond spin qubits for quantum sensing in noisy environments Nicole Fabbri, Università degli Studi di Firenze and CNR-INO, Italy 15.15-15.30 S3C.3 - Entanglement and Force Sensing with Massive Mechanical Oscillators Matt Woolley, UNSW Canberra, Australia 15.30-15.45 S3C.4 - Nanophotonic near-field levitated optomechanics Lorenzo Magrini, University of Vienna, Austria 15.45-16.00 S3C.5 - Measuring Motion Below the Standard Quantum Limit by Strong Optomechanical Quantum Correlations Junxin Chen, Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark Aula 7 - S3D • Quantum Sensors 14.30-15.00 S3D.1 - Single-Ion Clocks for Tests of Fundamental Physics and Applications in Quantum Technology Nils Huntemann, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany 15.00-15.15 S3D.2 - Quantum-chaotic sensors Daniel Braun, Tubingen University, Germany Rome, 4-6 April 2019 17
15.15-15.30 S3D.3 - Quantum Metrology for Fiber Laser Applications Mattis Reimer, INPHYNI, Université Côte d'Azur, CNRS, France 15.30-15.45 S3D.4 - Quantum-limited time-frequency estimation through mode-resolved measurements Vahid Ansari, Paderborn University, Germany 15.45-16.00 S3D.5 - Quantum-enhanced interferometric timing measurement with a squeezed optical frequency comb, Xiao Xiang, National Time Service Center, CAS, China 16.00-16.30 Coffee break Aula 3 - S4A • Single Photon Sources II 16.30-16.45 S4D.5 - Multipartite Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering sharing with separable states Yu Xiang, Peking University, China, & The University of Nottingham, UK 16.45-17.00 S3B.5 - Sensitivity enhancement by mode entanglement in distributed phase sensing Xueshi Guo, Technical University of Denmark, Lyngby, Denmark 17.00-17.15 S4A.2 - Influence of Electron-Phonon Interactions on the Spectral Properties of Defects in Hexagonal Boron Nitride Serkan Ates, Izmir Institute of Technology, Turkey 17.15-17.30 S4A.3 - Optimal Coherent Filtering for Single Photons Shaobo Gao, University of Oxford, UK Aula 4 - S4C • Quantum Networks II 16.30-17.00 S4C.1 - Towards a quantum internet David Elkouss, QUTech, Netherlands 17.00-17.15 S4C.2 - Hong-Ou-Mandel interference in the spin-wave domain Michal Parniak, University of Warsaw, Poland 17.15-17.30 S4C.3 - Optical Locking of a Solid State Electron Spin Qubit Jonathan Bodey, University of Cambridge, UK Rome, 4-6 April 2019 18
Aula Cabibbo - S4B • Quantum Technology III 16.30-16.45 S4B.2 - Quantum-State Tomography with Photon-Number-Resolving Homodyne Detection Maria Bondani, CNR - Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Italy 16.45-17.00 S4B.3 - A versatile quantum detector based on homodyne detection with photon-number resolution Guillaume S. Thekkadath, University of Oxford, UK 17.00-17.15 S4B.4 - Microwave-driven high-fidelity quantum logic with 43Ca+ Ryan K. Hanley, Oxford University, UK 17.15-17.30 S4D.6 - Supervised Quantum Learning as Quantum Channel Simulation Leonardo Banchi, University of Florence, Italy 17.30-17.45 S4D.4 - Non-equilibrium quantum thermometry Luca Mancino, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy 17.45-18.00 Aula Cabibbo - Concluding Remarks Rome, 4-6 April 2019 19
POSTER SESSION I – THURSDAY 4 APRIL T5A.02 Free Spectral Range Electrical Tuning of a Double Disk Microcavity Christiaan Bekker, The University of Queensland (Australia) T5A.03 High visibility Hong-Ou-Mandel interference from weak-coherent pulses generated by III—V on silicon waveguide integrated lasers Costantino Agnesi, Universita degli Studi di Padova (Italy) T5A.04 Observation of Quantum Decay Dynamics in an Integrated Photonic Chip Andrea Crespi, Politecnico di Milano, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy) T5A.05 Pseudo energy representation of multi-photon states in photonic tight-binding lattices Konrad Tschernig, Max-Born-Institut Berlin (Germany) T5A.06 All optical actively tunable quantum signal de-multiplexer based on sum frequency generation Zhi-Yuan Zhou, Univ.of Sci. and Techn. of China (China) T5A.07 Low-loss Integrated Lithium Niobate Photonics for Quantum Light Generation Timothy McKenna, Stanford University (United States) T5A.08 Integrated source of entangled photon pair at telecom wavelength Mauro Valeri, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) T5A.09 Detuning-modulated composite pulses for integrated photonic circuits Hadar Greener, Tel Aviv University , Center for Light Matter Interaction (Israel) T5A.10 On-Chip Microwave-to-Optical Photon Conversion for Quantum Networks Jeremy Witmer, Stanford University (United States) T5A.11 Towards MIR heralded photons via intermodal four wave mixing in silicon waveguides Stefano Signorini, University of Trento (Italy) T5A.13 Quantum-optical Converter for Squeezed Light Vladislav Sukharnikov, Lomonosov Moscow State University (Russian Federation) T5A.14 Engineering Multiphoton Quantum States using Conditional Measurements Armando Perez-Leija, National Autonomous University of Mexico (Mexico) T5A.15 Time/frequency high-dimensional entanglement via engineered parametric downconversion Francesco Graffitti, Heriot Watt University (United Kingdom) T5A.16 Simulating the photon spatial distribution in spontaneous parametric down conversion (SPDC) Sivan Trajtenberg-Mills, TAU (Israel) T5A.17 Role of quantum non-Gaussian distance in entropic uncertainty relations Wonmin Son, Sogang (the Republic of Korea) T5A.18 Coherent manipulation of a three-dimensional maximally entangled state Bao-Sen Shi, Key Lab. of Quantum Information (China) T5A.19 Second-Harmonic Generation as a Source of Nonclassical Light Giovanni Chesi, University of Insubria - Como (Italy) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 20
T5A.20 Generation of two-mode squeezed states from a single temporally multiplexed squeezing source Mikkel Larsen, Technical University of Denmark (Denmark) T5A.21 The Effect of Electron Spin Dephasing on Nuclear Frequency Focusing in Quantum Dots William Dixon, University of Bristol, University of Bristol (United Kingdom) T5A.23 Detecting quantum features in the real world Alessia Allevi, University of Insubria (Italy) T5A.24 Generation of non-classical states of photons from metal-dielectric interface: a novel architecture for quantum information processing Shubhrangshu Dasgupta, Indian Institute of Technology Ropar (India) T5A.25 On the physical conclusion of the Heisenberg- Uncertainty-Relation Jascha Zander, Universität Hamburg (Germany) T5A.26 Huge plasmon-enhanced Third Harmonic Generation with graphene nanoribbons Alessandro Trenti, University of Vienna (Austria) T5A.27 Spatially Selective Hydrogen Irradiation/Removal of Dilute Nitrides: A Versatile Nanofabrication Tool for Photonic Applications Marco Felici, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) T5A.28 Reversible Energy Transfer Between a Single Defect in hBN and Graphene Serkan Ates, Izmir Institute of Technology (Turkey) T5A.29 Spectral Modulation Effect suppression and Compensation of Phase-Error-Induced- Micromotion in Ion Trap Yi Xie, National University of Defense Technology (China) T5A.30 Quantum-enhanced rotation measurements about unknown axes Aaron Goldberg, University of Toronto (Canada) T5A.31 Experimental demonstration of weak value amplification in trapped ion system Wei Wu, National Univ Defense Tech (United States) T5A.32 Towards a quantum-enhanced trapped-atom clock on a chip Meng-Zi Huang, ENS - Université PSL, Sorbonne Université, CNRS (France) T5A.33 Towards real-time optical quantum sensors Valeria Cimini, Università degli Studi Roma Tre (Italy) T5A.34 Towards multiparameter estimation - based quantum sensing Marco Sbroscia, Università degli Studi Roma Tre (Italy) T5A.35 Theoretical description of a multimode SU(1,1) interferometer Alessandro Ferreri, University of Paderborn (Germany) T5A.36 Experimental Multi-Qubit Robustness by Local Encoding Massimiliano Proietti, Heriot Watt University (United Kingdom) T5A.37 Quantum-Enhanced Magneto-optic Measurements in a Dissipative Medium Susumu Fukatsu, University of Tokyo, Komaba (Japan) T5A.38 Quantum Description of Single Photon Detectors Including Timing-Jitter Effects Élie Gouzien, Université Côte d'Azur (France) T5A.40 Approximated Canonical Phase Measurement for Single-Photon Polarization Detection Nicola Dalla Pozza, University of Florence (Italy) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 21
T5A.41 Machine Learning For Experimental Single Shot Phase Estimation Emanuele Polino, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) T5A.42 Quantum weak measurement with power recycling Qinglin Wu, Central China Normal University (China) T5A.43 Cavity-enhanced quantum metrology with internal squeezed light generation Mikhail Korobko, University of Hamburg (Germany) T5A.44 Photon coincidence measurement of time-correlated photons using an oscilloscope Jorge Arturo Rojas Santana, ITESM (Mexico) T5A.45 Compressed Sensing of Twisted Photons Dominik Koutny, Palacky University (Czech Republic) T5A.46 Multi-bit quantum digital signature based on temporal quantum ghost imaging Xin Yao, Tsinghua University (China) T5A.47 Phase Uncertainty in Quantum Linear Amplifiers Beyond the Small-Noise Approximation Andy Chia, Centre for Quantum Technologies (Singapore) T5A.49 On the Hyperdense Coding and Proposal of Hyperdense Coding Quantum Secure Communication Protocol Georgi Bebrov, Technical University of Varna (Bulgaria) T5A.50 Modal, Truly Counterfactual Communication with On-Chip Demonstration Proposal Jonte Hance, University of Bristol, University of Bristol (United Kingdom) T5A.51 Integrated Photonics for Counterfactual Communication Teodor Stromberg, University of Vienna (Austria) T5A.53 Distribution of Gaussian Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering by separable states Xiaolong Su, Shanxi University (China) T5A.55 Composable security of two-way continuous-variable quantum key distribution without active symmetrization Shouvik Ghorai, Sorbonne University - LIP6 (France) T5A.56 Towards hybrid entanglement distribution with an orbital angular momentum supporting fiber Daniele Cozzolino, DTU Fotonik (Denmark) T5A.57 Effective Single-SPAD Implementation of Quantum Key Distribution Paolo Martelli, Politecnico di Milano, DEIB (Italy) T5A.58 Point-ahead demonstration of a transmitting antenna for satellite quantum communication Xuan Han, Univ of Science and Technology of China (China) T5A.59 Noisy Detector? Good! Analysis of Trusted-Receiver Scenario in Continuous-Variable Quantum Key Distribution Fabian Laudenbach, AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, University of Vienna (Austria) T5A.60 Experimental Research on Remote Preparation of Qubit States Based on GHZ Channel Xu Wang, Guizhou University (China) T5A.61 Testing a Bell inequality in full field images of spontaneous parametric down-conversion. Paul-Antoine Moreau, University of Glasgow (United States) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 22
T5A.62 Biased Estimate For Superresolving Quantum Imaging Alexander Mikhalychev, B. I. Stepanov Inst. of Physics of NASB (Belarus) T5A.63 Quantum Temporal Imaging with Finite Time Aperture Giuseppe Patera, CNRS UMR 8523 - PhLAM (France) T5A.64 Incoherence and Lens-less Imaging in Quantum Ghost Diffraction Saravi Sina, Friedrich Schiller University Jena (Germany) T5A.65 Contrast Enhanced Imaging Using Quantum Correlations Thomas Gregory, University of Glasgow (United Kingdom) T5A.66 Correlation Plenoptic Microscopy Alessio Scagliola, Università degli Studi di Bari, Italy T5A.67 Optically Controlled Quantum Capacitor for Imaging Pouya Dianat, Drexel University, Nanograss (United States) T5A.68 Measurement of temporal signal based on second-order correlation in time domain WeiTao Liu, College of Science, NUDT (China) T5A.69 Magnon heralding in cavity optomagnonics Victor Bittencourt, Max Planck Institute for the science of light (Germany) T5A.70 Hong-Ou-Mandel interference between two weak coherent pulses retrieved from room- temperature quantum memories. Alessia Scriminich, University of Padova (Italy) T5A.71 Atom-to-Photon State Mapping by Quantum Teleportation Stephan Kucera, Universität des Saarlandes (Germany) T5A.72 Interferometric spin wave processor with reversible optical interface Mateusz Mazelanik, University of Warsaw (Poland) T5A.74 Polarization-preserving quantum frequency conversion for entanglement distribution in trapped-atom based quantum networks Matthias Bock, Saarland University (Germany) T5A.75 Towards a Suburban Quantum Network Link Tim van Leent, Ludwig-Maximilian-Universität (Germany) T5A.76 Noise Suppression via Atomic Absorption in a Raman Quantum Memory Thomas Hird, University of Oxford, University College London (United Kingdom) T5A.77 Quantum repeaters based on two species trapped ions Vladimir Malinovsky, US Army Research Laboratory (United States) T5A.78 Magneto-Optical Switch Based on Ultrahigh-Contrast Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Cesium Vapor Cell Denis Brazhnikov, Novosibirsk State University (Russian Federation) T5A.79 Overcoming the Decoherence Caused by Three-Body Collision in One-dimensional Single- mode Atomic Waveguide Wei Jiang, China Academy of Engineering Physics (China) T5A.80 Unviversal turn-on dynamics of superconducting nanowire single-photon detectorrs Kathryn Nicolich, The Ohio State University (United States) T5A.82 AtoMIc Gravi-GradiOmeter AMIGGO Romain Caldani, Laboratoire SYRTE (France) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 23
T5A.83 Electromagnetic induction imaging with atomic magnetometers Cameron Deans, University College London (United Kingdom) T5A.84 Spatial entanglement patterns and Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering in Bose-Einstein condensates Matteo Fadel, University of Basel (Switzerland) T5A.86 Mid-infrared Frequency-domain Optical Coherence Tomography with Undetected Photons Aron Vanselow, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (Germany) T5A.87 Optimal estimation of Hamiltonian parameters using Bayesian approach Claudio Sanavio, University of Malta (Malta) T5A.88 Near-Perfect Measurement of Photonic Spatial Modes Natalia Herrera Valencia, IQOQI, Heriot Watt University (United Kingdom) T5A.89 Feasibility of satellite quantum key distribution with continuous variable Daniele Dequal, Italian Space Agency (Italy) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 24
POSTER SESSION II – FRIDAY 5 APRIL F5A.01 First experimental realization of genuine time-bin entanglement Francesco Vedovato, Universita degli Studi di Padova (Italy) F5A.02 Photon Entanglement In Strongly Non-Degenerate Parametric Down Conversion And Its Applications Roman Zakharov, Moscow State University (Russian Federation) F5A.03 Quantum Communication Protocols Based on Hybrid Entanglement of Light Giovanni Guccione, Laboratoire Kastler Brossel (France) F5A.04 Generating counterpropagating path-entangled photon pairs source using simultaneous collinear spontaneous parametric down-conversion processes of nonlinear photonic crystal Chaoxiang Xi, Shanghai Jiao Tong University (China) F5A.05 How to detect qubit environment entanglement in pure dephasing evolutions Katarzyna Roszak, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology (Poland) F5A.07 Verifying Multi-Particle Entanglement with a Few Detection Events Valeria Saggio, University of Vienna (Austria) F5A.08 Frequency Comb single photon interferometry for optical measurement with undetected photons Sun Kyung Lee, Institute for Basic Science, IBS (the Republic of Korea) F5A.09 Wavefront Shaping of Spatially Entangled Photons Scattered by Dynamic Random Media Yaron Bromberg, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel) F5A.10 Manipulation of Cooper pair entanglement in hybrid topological Josephson junctions Gianmichele Blasi, Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (Italy) F5A.12 Hyperentangled photons for quantum communication? Nicolo Lo Piparo, National Institute of Informatics (Japan) F5A.14 Super-resonant parametric generation and golden ratio entanglement in hexagonally poled nonlinear crystals Ottavia Jedrkiewicz, CNR Istituto Fotonica e Nanotecnologie (Italy) F5A.16 Multiphoton Discrete Fractional Fourier Operations in Waveguide Beam Splitters Armando Perez-Leija, National Autonomous University of Mexico (Mexico) F5A.17 Teleportation Algorithm Settled in a Resonant Cavity Using Non-local Gates Francisco Delgado-Cepeda, Tecnologico de Monterrey (Mexico) F5A.18 Realizing an adiabatic quantum search algorithm with shortcuts to adiabaticity in an ion- trap system Wei Wu, Natl Univ Defense Tech (United States) F5A.19 Quantum Zeno Effect by Incomplete Measurements Pingxing Chen, NUDT (China) F5A.22 Visual assessment of multiphoton interference Fulvio Flamini, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.23 Advantage of Indefinite Causal Order in Quantum Metrology Xiaobin Zhao, The University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 25
F5A.24 Modeling two-qubit Grovers algorithm implementation in a linear optical chip Eduard Samsonov, ITMO University (Russian Federation) F5A.25 Thermodynamic properties of stochastic quantum measurements Lorenzo Buffoni, Università degli Studi di Firenze, LENS (Italy) F5A.26 Experimental learning of quantum states Davide Poderini, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.27 Communication using an indefinite causal structure Lorenzo Procopio, C2N-CNRS (France) F5A.28 Supervised learning of time-independent Hamiltonians for gate design Luca Innocenti, Queen's University Belfast (United Kingdom) F5A.31 Spectral Path Entanglement of Photons Using the All-Optical Stern-Gerlach Effect Aviv Karnieli, Tel Aviv University (Israel) F5A.32 Quantum Blockchain, a Simplified Framework Mirek Sopek, MakoLab SA (Poland) F5A.33 Demonstration of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Steering via Enhanced Subchannel Discrimination Kai Sun, Univ. of Sci. & Tech. of China (China) F5A.34 Direct Reconstruction of the Quantum Density Matrix by Strong Measurements Giulio Foletto, Università degli Studi di Padova (Italy) F5A.35 Experimental nonlocality-based randomness generation with nonprojective measurements Santiago Gómez, Universidad de Concepción (Chile) F5A.36 Extended wavefunctions for the Variational Quantum Eigensolver Leonardo Guidoni, University of L'Aquila (Italy) F5A.37 "Which-way" Spin Decoherence in a Coupled Quantum Dot System Mateusz Krzykowski, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology (Poland) F5A.38 Dense Measurements for Quantum Computations Laszlo Gyongyosi, University of Southampton, Budapest University of Technology and Economics (Hungary) F5A.40 Quantum communication advantage with coherent states and one beam splitter Niraj Kumar, Sorbonne Université (France) F5A.41 Quantum algorithms on a four-qubit photonic controlled-shift gate Joseph Ho, Griffith University (Australia), Heriot-Watt University (United Kingdom) F5A.42 Critical-point behaviour of a measurement-based quantum heat engine Asoka Biswas, Indian Institute of Technology, Ropar (India) F5A.43 Improving SPDC Single-Photon Sources Via Spectral Filtering And Feed-Forward Control Marcello Massaro, Univeristy of Paderborn (Germany) F5A.44 New insights in phase diffusion process in a gain-switched semiconductor laser for quantum random number generation (QRNG) Marta Gilaberte Basset, Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Optics and Precision Engineering IOF (Germany) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 26
F5A.45 Verifying genuine multipartite entanglement of the whole from its separable parts Ladislav Mista, Palacky University (Czech Republic) F5A.46 Controlling Multi-Level Quantum Systems in Cryogenic Surface-Electrode Ion Traps Maciej Malinowski, Institute for Quantum Electronics, ETH Zurich (Switzerland) F5A.48 Engineering of Quantum States through Quantum Walk in the Angular Momentum Alessia Suprano, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.49 Tuning single-photon sources for telecom multi-photon experiments Peter Schiansky, University of Vienna (Austria) F5A.50 Tunable two-photon quantum interference of structured light Vincenzo D'Ambrosio, Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II (Italy) F5A.52 Light-matter interaction in an optically asymmetric wedge type nanocavity Belkis Gokbulut, Bogazici University (Turkey) F5A.54 Dynamics of tripartite quantum systems: Squeezing properties and entanglement collapse to nonzero constant values Pradip Laha, Indian Institute of Technolodgy Madras (India) F5A.55 Estimating entanglement indicators from multipartite optical tomograms Sharmila Balamurugan, Indian Institute of Technology Madras (India) F5A.56 Peculiarities of Coherent Population Trapping During the Interaction of Three-level Atom with Non-classical Light Daria Popolitova, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University (Russian Federation) F5A.57 Spinor atoms in an optical nanocavity: generation of N-photon pulses and spin-entangled states Caspar Groiseau, University of Auckland (New Zealand) F5A.58 Nonreciprocity with a Nonlinear Superconducting Circuit Andres Rosario Hamann, The University of Queensland (Australia) F5A.59 Debye-Waller factor depend on temperature with the influence of doping ratio of the crystal structure metals in extended X-Ray absorption fine structure Duc Nguyen Ba, Tan Trao University (Viet Nam) F5A.61 Atom-mediated Nonlinear Photon-Pair Generation using Photonic Band-Gap Modes Sina Saravi, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena (Germany) F5A.62 High-Resolution Spectroscopy of Deterministically Generated Single Photons from a Single Atom Matthias Kreis, Universität des Saarlandes (Germany) F5A.63 Process steps behind extrcating quantum information out of measured data Chandra Roychoudhuri, University of Connecticut (United States) F5A.64 Proposing an experimental setup for probing coherent light-matter interaction in dense atomic clouds Klara Theophilo, USP (Brazil) F5A.65 Study of wide-field Imaging spectrometer based on Fery prism with optical fiber array Weiyan Li, Chinese Academy of Science CAS (United States) F5A.66 Two-membrane Cavity Optomechanics Paolo Piergentili, University of Camerino, INFN, Sezione di Perugia (Italy) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 27
F5A.67 Ultra-low dissipation mechanical resonators for cavity optomechanics Mohammad Bereyhi, EPFL (Switzerland) F5A.68 Nonlinear Stroboscopic Quantum Optomechanics Andrey Rakhubovskiy, Palacky University (Czech Republic) F5A.69 Exploring corrections to the Optomechanical Hamiltonian Tommaso Tufarelli, University of Nottingham (United Kingdom) F5A.70 Quantum thermometry in optomechanics Francesco Marin, Università degli Studi di Firenze, INFN (Italy) F5A.71 On the observation of the dynamical Lamb effect with a superconducting circuit Mirko Amico, City University of New York (United States) F5A.72 Entanglement generation and simultaneity with superconducting qubits Carlos Sabín, Instituto de Física Fundamental CSIC (Spain) F5A.73 Experimental Realization of an Innovative Phase-Stable Bulk-Optic Scheme for Quantum Walks Andrea Geraldi, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.74 Directly Measuring the Winding Number in Photonic Discrete Time Quantum Walks Xiao-Ye Xu, Key Lab of Quantum information USTC (United States) F5A.75 Refocusing in forced photonic quantum walks controlled by liquid crystal gratings Chiara Esposito, University of Naples Federico II, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.76 Quantum Control of Quantum Solitons Giulia Marcucci, University of Rome La Sapienza (Italy) F5A.77 Noise-assisted transport through quantum networks using cold atoms Plamen Petrov, University of Birmingham (United Kingdom) F5A.78 Ignorance of the whole does not imply ignorance of the parts: Qudit Random Access Codes in spatial modes of light Michael Kewming, University of Queensland (Australia) F5A.79 Probing magnetic ordering and dynamics with ultracold bosonic atoms Araceli Venegas Gomez, University of Strathclyde (United Kingdom) F5A.81 Witnessing entanglement with nonlocal operation WeiDong Li, Shanxi University (China) F5A.82 Long-range distribution of multiphoton entanglement Monika Mycroft, University of Warsaw (Poland) F5A.83 A modified Hong-Ou-Mandel interferometer for two-parameter sensing Yu Yang, Xidian University, Xi’an, China; Scuola Normale Superiore, Pisa, Italy (Italy) F5A.84 A novel method of data remapping for quantum information science Syed Adil Rab, Cogisen Srl (Italy) F5A.85 Quantum Control in Ultrafast Coherent Bond Making Zohar Amitay, Technion - IIT (Israel) F5A.86 Optical Trapping of Magnesium Ions in Two-Dimensional Arrays and Spectroscopy on Magnesium Rydberg Atoms Oliver Wipfli, ETH Zürich (Switzerland) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 28
F5A.87 Simulation of Integrated Photonic Gates Andrei-Emanuel Dragomir, Horia Hulubei National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering IFIN-HH (Romania) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 29
INFORMATION FOR PRESENTERS Slide center PCs will be available in the rooms for presenters. Speakers are requested to deliver their slides during the break before the beginning of the session at the latest. PowerPoint and PDF formats are accepted. If your presentation has special features (videos, etc.), please advise the slide center at least 4 hours before the start of your session. Speakers on 4 and 5 April shall deliver their slides to the slide center (Rettorato, Aula Magna) Speakers on 6 April shall deliver their slides directly in the rooms Poster sessions Check your poster number and the corresponding session. Presenters are invited to stand by their poster(s) during the poster session. Display times Poster session I (posters no. T5A.1 - T5A.89): Posters can be hanged on Thursday 4 April from 12.30 Poster session II (posters no. F5A.1 - F5A.86): Posters can be hanged on Friday 5 April from 10.30 Removal times Posters must be removed at the end of the session (the panels will be removed at the end of each session). Rome, 4-6 April 2019 30
GENERAL INFORMATION Registration desk opening times Day Opening times Location 3 April 09.00-18.00 Rettorato, Aula Organi Collegiali 4 April 08.30-17.30 Rettorato, Ground Floor 5 April 08.15-17.30 Rettorato, Ground Floor 6 April 08.15-18.00 Fermi building Certificate of attendance Certificate of attendance will be sent by email after the event Abstract book All accepted papers will be published and indexed as Conference Proceedings in OSA Technical Digest. The abstracts of the conference are available online at: https://www.quantumlab.it/qim2019/full-program/ Wi-Fi Eduroam network is available in the University Campus. If you cannot connect through Eduroam, Wi-Fi Internet username and passwords to access to network "sapienza" are available at the Secretariat Desk. How to connect: 1. Make sure your network adapter is set to ‘DHCP - Obtain an IP address Automatically’; 2. Connect to SSID: sapienza; 3. Open your web browser, you'll be redirected to a captive page; 4. Enter username and password in the spaces provided. Conference website www.quantumlab.it/qim2019 Organizing Secretariat Scientific Communication srl info@jeangilder.it Tel +39 081 229.6460/6037 Rome, 4-6 April 2019 31
SOCIAL EVENT Thursday 4 April 2019 19.30: Welcome drink 20.00: Dinner Location: Terrazza Caffarelli, Piazza Caffarelli 4. Directions from the University Campus (approx. 45 min) From the Rettorato building, take the exit to Viale Regina Elena and turn left to the Policlinico station of the Metro line B (10-min walk). Take the Metro Line B from Policlinico direction Laurentina, get off at Colosseo station. Then take via dei Fori Imperiali, turn left and walk towards the Campidoglio. The Terrazza Caffarelli is at the right of the Campidoglio (18-min walk). From Colosseo metro station to Terrazza Caffarelli (18-min walk) Rome, 4-6 April 2019 32
ORGANIZERS & SUPPORTERS Rome, 4-6 April 2019 33
ORGANIZERS & SUPPORTERS Rome, 4-6 April 2019 34
SPONSORS Rome, 4-6 April 2019 35
VENUE Rettorato and Fermi building, Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, Rome Aula Magna Regina Elena, Viale Regina Elena 291 4 & 5 April 6 April Registration desk Rettorato building Fermi building "CIAO" Entrance Plenary Sessions Rettorato building Fermi building Aula Magna Aula Cabibbo, ground floor Parallel 1 Rettorato building Fermi building Aula Magna Aula 3, 2nd floor Parallel 2 Aula Magna Regina Fermi building Elena Aula 4, 2nd floor Parallel 3 Rettorato building Fermi building Aula Organi Collegiali Aula Cabibbo, ground floor Parallel 4 Fermi building Aula 7, 4th floor Poster session Rettorato building Catering Rettorato building Rettorato building 1st floor 1st floor Exhibition Rettorato building Fermi building 1st floor Rome, 4-6 April 2019 36
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