What are quantum communications, and what implications will this new technology have for information security?
What are quantum communications, and what implications will this new technology have for information security?
Quantum technologies are new disruptive technologies in which fundamental aspects of quantum physics are instrumental in providing advantages over the conventional technology counterparts. Examples include quantum computing, sensing, imaging and communications.
Professor Tim Spiller will briefly outline examples and illustrate their “quantum advantage”, before discussing quantum communications in more detail. He’ll give a short overview of what is being pursued in the UK National Quantum Technologies Programme, and then expand on the technologies being delivered by the Quantum Communications Hub.
Speaker
Professor Tim Spiller moved to York in 2014 as founding Director of the York Centre for Quantum Technologies. He is now also Director of the UK Quantum Communications Hub, part of the UK National Quantum Technologies Programme.
Prior to this he was at the University of Leeds in the roles of Head of the Quantum Information Group and Director of Research for the School of Physics and Astronomy.
Prior to 2009, Professor Spiller was Director of Quantum Information Processing (QIP) Research at HP Labs Bristol – an activity that he established in 1995 – and a Hewlett-Packard Distinguished Scientist.
He has spent around 40 years researching quantum theory, superconducting systems and quantum hardware and technologies and has published extensively across this spectrum.
He led HP’s strategy on the commercialisation of QIP research, is an inventor on 25 patents linked to quantum technologies and applications, and was additionally a consultant inside HP on networking, communications and nanotechnology.