A quantum device shows promise for simulating molecular dynamics in a difficult-to-model photochemical process that is relevant to vision.
Read https://t.co/mM0uTEObaP
@PhysicsMagazine Synopsis https://t.co/l6sK2A9BQE
@_cswang_@Ben__Chapman@ShrutiPuri11@Yale_QI#PRXqst
@ryjmac Congrats! 🎉 Nice to see this idea fully worked out. Hopefully it inspires more experimental work on enacting conditional multimode bosonic gates. Also, this is perhaps a relevant reference for you: https://t.co/8tfEPWhCBn :)
What sets the T1 times of the best transmons on sapphire? Bulk dielectric loss in the substrate is likely one of the largest remaining losses: https://t.co/xy4tXIjno7
I arrived at Yale 7 years ago knowing almost nothing about quantum computing. Yesterday, I defended my PhD in front of all those who have made this possible. Thanks to my committee Liang, Michel, Steve, and Rob. It’s been a wonderful journey! @Yale_QI
Congratulations to the newly minted doc @_cswang_ on his defense today--a stellar body of work! Thank you for all the insights and discussions, and for teaching me about conical intersections https://t.co/KrgfaWcRL4
Quantum researchers from YQI attended a peaceful protest asking to stop the war in Ukraine. Our researchers are from all over the world (including Ukraine & Russia) and work together, united, toward the same goal to advance our knowledge to improve humanity, not destroying it.
to summarize, we simulate nonadiabatic molecular dynamics through a conical intersection in the presence of dissipation, which are all the core ingredients for modeling a class of chemical reactions such as the isomerization reaction of rhodopsin in vision.
excited to share our latest work, conceived during (and honestly, because of) lockdown in 2020. many thanks to the whole team, in particular Nick Frattini, Ben Chapman, @ShrutiPuri11, and others at @Yale_QI!
https://t.co/6isfVR9Nas
@qmathexcitement@ShrutiPuri11@jenseisert no quantitative incentives other than avoiding awkward silence when the question is posed to the class, but i think if this is implemented as early as possible in the semester, then it will be viewed more favorably as a norm rather than a punishment