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Mr Timothy Lee (University of Ottawa)23/06/2026, 18:00Division for Quantum Information / Division de l'information quantique (DQI / DIQ)Poster Competition (Graduate Student) / Compétition affiches (Étudiant(e) 2e ou 3e cycle)
Time-bin encoding is a promising platform for long-distance, optical fibre-based quantum key distribution (QKD) because it can support high communication rates and is robust to polarization instability which is present in commercial single-mode fibres. Practical time-bin encoding requires the bin separation time to be small enough to maintain sufficient phase stability in interferometric...
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Dhyan Baruah (University of New Brunswick, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering)23/06/2026, 18:00Division for Quantum Information / Division de l'information quantique (DQI / DIQ)Poster Competition (Undergraduate Student) / Compétition affiches (Étudiant(e) du 1er cycle)
Distributed quantum computation is currently constrained by the latency of probabilistic inter-module entanglement. Traditional architectures rely on sequential teleportation, where the total runtime scales with the sum of geometric waiting times for each successful Bell-pair generation. In this work, we propose "stitched measurement-based quantum computation" (stitched MBQC) as a...
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Kyle Jordan (National Research Council Canada)23/06/2026, 18:00Division for Quantum Information / Division de l'information quantique (DQI / DIQ)Poster (Non-Student) / Affiche (Non-étudiant(e))
Spectroscopy is routinely applied to measurement of photosensitive samples such as single molecules, quantum emitters (such as quantum dots), and perovskite solar cells. These samples are irreversibly altered when exposed to high optical powers, which necessitates the use of probe beams low photon fluxes. In this regime, measurement statistics are dominated by shot noise, which fundamentally...
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Mohamed Amine Kabraoui (University of Ottawa)23/06/2026, 18:00Division for Quantum Information / Division de l'information quantique (DQI / DIQ)Poster Competition (Graduate Student) / Compétition affiches (Étudiant(e) 2e ou 3e cycle)
Single-photon emitters (SPEs) are fundamental for optical-based quantum technologies [1], however, high quality and practically usable SPEs require properties that are hard to realize in the lab. Ideal SPEs must have high purity, produce indistinguishable photons with high brightness and must be easily reproduceable and scalable. A potential avenue to achieve these properties is to use...
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