QALGO (600700)
https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/600700
FP7 (2007-2013)
Quantum Algorithmics
FET Proactive: Quantum ICT (QICT) including ERA-NET-Plus (ICT-2011.9.9)
quantum physics · computer and information sciences · quantum computers
2013-05-01 Start Date (YY-MM-DD)
2016-04-30 End Date (YY-MM-DD)
€ 2,569,465 Total Cost
Description
We will study the algorithmic aspects of quantum information. Our goal is to find new algorithms for quantum computers and new quantum communication protocols that are more efficient than the classical protocols. We will pursue this goal in a number of different ways.<br/>Firstly, we will study concrete problems that may have fast quantum algorithms and develop methods for constructing quantum algorithms. We will investigate the use of quantum walks (quantum counterparts of random walks) and learning graphs (a very new method which appeared less than a year ago) to construct quantum algorithms. We will also study two promising application areas for new quantum algorithms: hidden shift problems and property testing.<br/>Secondly, we will investigate general properties of quantum algorithms, such as the role of various resources (e.g., quantum entanglement or quantum discord) in quantum algorithms. We will study restricted forms of quantum computation, to find the minimum conditions under which universal quantum computation is possible. We will investigate the role of structure in input data in quantum speedups, by studying the maximum quantum speedups achievable in various settings.<br/>Thirdly, we will study the counterparts of those questions in the communication setting. We will work on designing quantum protocols that solve communication tasks more efficiently than any classical protocol and investigate quantum communication in a game-theoretic setting where parties act to maximize their self-interest.<br/>Lastly, we will investigate applications of quantum information concepts in other areas, namely to solve classical problems in computer science and to understand the computational complexity of problems in quantum physics. One of the major applications of a future quantum computer is to simulate quantum physical systems. Our goal is to understand this area in terms of complexity and possible quantum algorithms and to compare these with classical computational techniques.
Complicit Organisations
1 Israeli organisation participates in QALGO.Country | Organisation (ID) | VAT Number | Role | Activity Type | Total Cost | EC Contribution | Net EC Contribution |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | THE CHANCELLOR MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE (999977172) | GB823847609 | participant | HES | € 0 | € 249,600 | € 0 |
France | Université Paris Diderot-Paris 7 (999865525) | FR66197517238 | participant | HES | € 0 | € 171,642 | € 0 |
Netherlands | STICHTING CENTRUM VOOR WISKUNDE EN INFORMATICA (999653968) | NL002953390B01 | participant | REC | € 0 | € 250,239 | € 0 |
Germany | RHEINISCH-WESTFAELISCHE TECHNISCHE HOCHSCHULE AACHEN (999983962) | DE121689807 | participant | HES | € 0 | € 249,600 | € 0 |
Belgium | UNIVERSITE LIBRE DE BRUXELLES (999986290) | BE0407626464 | participant | HES | € 0 | € 249,600 | € 0 |
Latvia | LATVIJAS UNIVERSITATE (999871830) | LV90000076669 | coordinator | HES | € 0 | € 451,000 | € 0 |
Israel | THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM (999975038) | IL500701610 | participant | HES | € 0 | € 249,960 | € 0 |
France | CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS (999997930) | FR40180089013 | participant | REC | € 0 | € 78,357 | € 0 |