The recordings for #QIP2023 talks are now live. You can find them on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@qip2023
QIP2023

The official YouTube channel of QIP2023, Ghent

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I had my first ever #QIP2023 talk: Rump session, of course ;-)
Hope it was minimally entertaining. Please consider the main take-home message: we want your thoughts on what would be good incentives for being a referee. #PRXQuantum
#QIP2023 was a blast, I love the community. I learned a lot and made new friends. Great organization, great talks, fantastic rump session in a beautiful city. Big thank you to the organizers! Big thank you to
@kenbrownquantum / Duke supporting my trip here!
That's a wrap on #QIP2023. Thanks to all the speakers and attendees for making it such a productive week. Talks will appear on our YouTube channel soon. Thank you for visiting Ghent.
All dressed up for the #qip2023 conference dinner!
Ludovico Lami on experiments to test the quantum nature of gravity. In contrast to previous proposals, no entanglement is created! The paper with Pedernales and Plenio scirate.com/arxiv/2302.030… appeals to my vanity by citing my bet with @carlorovelli & @quantum_geoff 🤣 #QIP2023
QMAI TU Delft is represented at #QIP2023 by Arash Ahmadi who’s presenting our results on how to quickly estimate the quantumness your circuit is producing. Go talk to him! #quantummagic #OTOC #scrambling
Poster session 2 is underway at #QIP2023. Good luck getting to all 240 great poster on display
Feynman claimed that quantum interference was "a phenomenon which is impossible, absolutely impossible, to explain in any classical way." Not so, shows Lorenzo Catani et. al. at #QIP2023 (https://arxiv.org/abs/2111.13727)
Why interference phenomena do not capture the essence of quantum theory

Quantum interference phenomena are widely viewed as posing a challenge to the classical worldview. Feynman even went so far as to proclaim that they are the only mystery and the basic peculiarity of quantum mechanics. Many have also argued that basic interference phenomena force us to accept a number of radical interpretational conclusions, including: that a photon is neither a particle nor a wave but rather a Jekyll-and-Hyde sort of entity that toggles between the two possibilities, that reality is observer-dependent, and that systems either do not have properties prior to measurements or else have properties that are subject to nonlocal or backwards-in-time causal influences. In this work, we show that such conclusions are not, in fact, forced on us by basic interference phenomena. We do so by describing an alternative to quantum theory, a statistical theory of a classical discrete field (the `toy field theory') that reproduces the relevant phenomenology of quantum interference while rejecting these radical interpretational claims. It also reproduces a number of related interference experiments that are thought to support these interpretational claims, such as the Elitzur-Vaidman bomb tester, Wheeler's delayed-choice experiment, and the quantum eraser experiment. The systems in the toy field theory are field modes, each of which possesses, at all times, both a particle-like property (a discrete occupation number) and a wave-like property (a discrete phase). Although these two properties are jointly possessed, the theory stipulates that they cannot be jointly known. The phenomenology that is generally cited in favour of nonlocal or backwards-in-time causal influences ends up being explained in terms of inferences about distant or past systems, and all that is observer-dependent is the observer's knowledge of reality, not reality itself.

arXiv.org
Packed to the rafters for the final talk of the morning, day 2 at #QIP2023. Presented by Nouédyn Baspin