Quantum Theory: From Problems to Advances (QTPA)
Linnaeus University, June 9-12, 2014.
QTPA conference is arranged by ICMM, International Centre for Mathematical Modelling in physics, engineering and cognitive sciences, at Linnaeus University in Växjö, Sweden. It is devoted to quantum foundations and quantum information, especially the clarification of fundamental questions.
Organization committee
- De Raedt (Univ. of Groningen, the Netherlands)
- Hasegawa (Atom Institute, Austrian Academy of Science, Austria)
- Khrennikov (Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden)
- Migdall (NIST, USA)
- Plotnitsky (Purdue University, USA)
- Polyakov (NIST, USA)
Local organizing committee
Andrei Khrennikov, Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden
Conference Programme
Abstracts
Special Sessions
Testing boundaries of Quantum theory: experiment and its interpretation Organizers Alan Migdall and Sergey Polyakov
Relativity meets Quantum Theory
Organizer Giacomo Mauro D'Ariano
Quantum Foundations meet General Relativity
Organizers Markus Aspelmeyer and Caslav Brukner
Philosophical significance of quantum reconstruction theorems
Organizers Guido Bacciagaluppi and Philip Goyal
Invited speakers
- Abramsky (Oxford University, UK)
- Acin (Institute of Photonic Sciences, Barcelona, Spain)
- Amelino-Camelia (University of Rome la Sapienza, Italy)
- M. D'Ariano (University of Pavia, Italy)
- Aspelmeyer (Vienna University, Austria)
- Atmanspacher (IGPP, Freiburg, Germany/ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
- Bacciagaluppi (University of Aberdeen, UK)
- Bengtsson (Stockholm University, Sweden)
- Björk (Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden)
- Brukner (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Curceanu (LNF-INFN, Italy)
- Coecke (Oxford University, UK)
- Dahlström (Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Hamburg)
- De Martini (University of Rome, Italy)
- Dickson (University of South Carolina, USA)
- Dzhafarov (Purdue University)
- Gill, (University of Leiden, the Netherlands)
- Gooding (UBC, Canada)
- Goyal (University at Albany, USA)
- Greenberger (NYCC, USA)
- Grinbaum (CEA Saclay, France)
- Hasegawa (Atom Institute, Austrian Academy of Science, Austria)
- Haven (Leicester University, UK)
- C. Hiesmayr (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Hosoya (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
- Jager (Boston University, USA)
- Khrennikov (Linnaeus University, Sweden)
- Kiesel (University of Vienna, Austria)
- Kofler (Vienna University, Austria)
- Kolthammer (Oxford University, UK)
- Kupczynski (University of Ottawa, Canada)
- -Å. Larsson (Linköping University, Sweden)
- Levine (NIST Gaithersburg, USA)
- Manko (Lebdev Institute, Russian Academy of Science, Moscow)
- Michielsen (University of Aachen, Germany)
- Migdall (NIST Gaithersburg, USA)
- Milburn (UQ, Australia)
- Monz (Innsbruck University, Austria)
- Mueller (Heidelberg University, Germany)
- Nieuwenhuizen (University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands)
- Nilsson (Linnaeus University, Sweden)
- Ozawa (Nagoya University, Japan)
- Perinotti (University of Pavia, Italy)
- Plotnitsky (Purdue University, USA)
- Polyakov (NIST Gaithersburg, USA)
- De Raedt (Univ. of Groningen, the Netherlands)
- Ramelow (Vienna University, Austria)
- Ritter (Max-Planck-Institut für Quantenoptik, Garching, Germany)
- Scarani (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
- Stairs (University of Maryland, USA)
- Watanabe (Tokyo University of Science, Japan)
- Zeilinger (IQOQI, Austrian Academy of Science, Austria)
- Zhang (Institute for Quantum Computing Waterloo, Canada)
- Zych (University of Vienna, Austria)