Julio Gea-Banacloche

Summary

Julio Gea-Banacloche (born 1957) is professor of physics and currently the head of the department of physics at the University of Arkansas. He is notable for his contribution to the field of quantum information, where he has shown that the quantum mechanical nature of the fields used to manipulate the quantum information carriers (qubits) themselves might lead to unpredictable errors in the performance of the quantum logical operations. The lower bound on the size of these errors can be made smaller by increasing the energy of the control system. This has led Gea-Banacloche to predict a minimum energy requirement for quantum computation, which has given rise to some controversy.[1]

Julio Gea-Banacloche
Born1957
CitizenshipAmerican
Alma materUniversity of New Mexico
Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
Known forEnergy bound on quantum computation
Scientific career
FieldsPhysicist
InstitutionsUniversity of Arkansas
Doctoral advisorMarlan O. Scully

Education edit

He received his BS from Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, 1979; and obtained his PhD under Marlan O. Scully, 1985, on free-electron lasers, from the University of New Mexico with a thesis entitled: Quantum Theory of the Free-Electron Laser.

Career edit

In 1985–1987, he served as a research associate, Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics. In 1988-1990 he was a staff scientist, Instituto de Optica, Madrid, Spain. In 1990, he joined the University of Arkansas. He is an associate editor of Physical Review A and Fellow of the American Physical Society. He has carried out theoretical work in laser physics, quantum optics, and quantum information.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ TechNews report

External links edit

  • Gea-Banacloche's homepage
  • Gea-Banacloche's achievements
  • Gea-Banacloche on Qwiki
  • Gea-Banacloche's math genealogy
  • Related work: J. Gea-Banacloche, L.B. Kish, Comparison of Energy requirements for Classical and Quantum Information Processing, Fluctuation and Noise Lett. 3 (2003) C3-C6.