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Building a Quantum Information Highway Network with Topological Edge States | Penn State Ashtekar Frontiers of Science–2025: Year of Quantum

The Ashtekar Frontiers of Science Lectures in the Penn State Eberly College of Science, a series of free public lectures now in its 31st year, will return to Penn State on Jan. 25.

This year’s lecture series, titled “2025: Year of Quantum,” will explore how physics at the smallest scales impacts materials, human health, computing, communications, and more. The 2025 lecture series celebrates 100 years of quantum mechanics and the UNESCO International Year of Quantum Science and Technology with six lectures on consecutive Saturdays that explore the depth and breadth of quantum research at Penn State and beyond.

Attendees of the lectures will hear from researchers on topics that include communications and privacy in the quantum era; the chemistry of quantum materials; how quantum computing could revolutionize diverse scientific disciplines; theory to help us understand the behavior of quantum gases; how quantum computers can overcome high error rates to perform accurate calculations; and how one-dimensional quantum wires called edge states may offer a solution to the problem of building networks in rapidly growing quantum computers.

The lecture series this year will be held on the Penn State University Park campus on six consecutive Saturday mornings, Jan. 25 through March 1, from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in either 100 Thomas Building or 001 Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Building, as listed below. Talks will be followed by an audience question and answer session, moderated by Eberly College of Science graduate students.

On March 1, Jun Zhu, professor of physics, will present a talk titled “Building a quantum information highway network with topological edge states.”

Event Details

Location
Virtual
Date
March 1, 2025
Time
11:00 AM
Primary Language(s)
English
Event Entry
Free Entry