Search

10 December 2014

CQT is seven

How does a seven-year-old research centre celebrate its birthday? With a scientific symposium, of course.

How do seven year-old research centres like to celebrate their birthday? With a scientific symposium, of course.

 

The Centre for Quantum Technologies turned seven this month. We celebrated with a symposium on 8 December featuring talks by three distinguished speakers.

  • “Quantum information and the monogamy of entanglement” by Aram Harrow, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
  • “The Quantum Way of Doing Computations” by Rainer Blatt, University of Innsbruck, Austria
  • “Random for whom?” by Valerio Scarani, Centre for Quantum Technologies, NUS

These excellent talks were a perfect birthday present for CQTians, and we thank the distinguished speakers for taking part in our special event. The sympoisum was held at the Ngee Ann Kongsi Auditorium at NUS University Town and was open to the public by prior registration.

Videos of the talks will go on our YouTube channel soon. Photos from the event are on CQT’s Facebook page.

Links

Related Stories

Browser not supported

Modern websites need modern browsers

To enjoy the full experience, please upgrade your browser

Try this browser
A pie chart showing the count of papers with CQT co-authors in 2024 by journal impact factor

Publications by CQT researchers during 2024 by journal impact factor (IF)​

A pie chart showing the nationality of CQTians by region of the world.

Nationalities of CQT staff and students as of 31 Dec 2024​

A pie chart showing the count of CQTians by categories

Count of CQT staff and students as of 31 Dec 2024​

*Admin count includes only staff directly employed within the Centre. HR, IT and procurement is supported by additional staff working across University centres.