Event
Special Energy Cluster Seminar: "Quantum physics to address global energy challenges"
Michael Biercuk, University of Sydney
Quantum
physics research is providing surprising new avenues to solve
longstanding challenges in energy - from lossy power distribution
systems to inefficient large-scale fertilizer production. In this talk,
I will explain how learning to build technologies that use exotic
quantum effects as resources provides an exciting opportunity to improve
the generation, distribution, and use of energy. My presentation will
focus on the specific example of global efforts to build special-purpose
quantum computers know as quantum simulators capable of addressing
critical challenges in chemistry and materials science with relevance to
energy. I will discuss my own group’s efforts on quantum control with
trapped ions, describing how our experiments are revealing new
fundamental physics insights and underpinning the development of useful
quantum simulators. This will include experiments using quantum control
techniques to both keep quantum states “alive” and synthesize strongly
correlated systems that do not exist in nature, along with the
demonstration of the first quantum spin simulator at a computationally
relevant scale.