Low-temperature physics: quantum researchers collaborate in Canadian arctic

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Quantum in Iqaluit group photo

by Colin Hunter, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

Cutting-edge science met centuries-old traditions when researchers from the Institute for Quantum Computing trekked to the Canadian territory of Nunavut to share ideas.

On a mossy ridge overlooking a valley carved by an ancient glacier, the trekkers stopped to share caribou meat, narwhal, and Arctic char.

They watched melting icebergs drift in the Arctic Sea, and warmed their rosy faces in the sun, which never fully sets in summer and never fully rises in winter.聽After assessing the weather and the best route onward, they moved onto another pressing subject: microwave quantum optics with superconducting circuits.

Quantum science is a counter-intuitive field that can require researchers to step outside of their comfort zones, both mentally and physically. So, earlier this month, several-dozen of them ventured onto the thawing midsummer tundra of Iqaluit, the capital of Canada鈥檚 newest territory, Nunavut.

Like any typical scientific gathering, 鈥淨uantum in Iqaluit鈥 included presentations and question periods; unlike most, it also included discussions about what to do in the (unlikely) event that a hungry polar bear should wander into town.

鈥淭his morning I had a wonderful conversation with a man who was born in an igloo and grew up hunting and trapping, and now I鈥檓 going to talk to you about quantum mechanics,鈥 , a physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, told his peers at the beginning of his presentation.聽鈥淚t鈥檚 not often something like this happens.鈥

And that, in large part, was the point. 鈥淨uantum in Iqaluit鈥 was conceived with an eye to blending cutting-edge science with ancient traditions in a unique setting that sparked different ways of thinking.

Raymond Laflamme in a boat on the beach in Apex
Raymond Laflamme, who served as IQC鈥檚 director for 15 years until stepping down this June, explores the beach in Apex, just outside Iqaluit.

The conference was timed to commemorate the 15th anniversary of the Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) at the University of 蓝莓视频, and to celebrate the legacy of the institute鈥檚 founding director,聽, who stepped down from the post a week prior.

鈥淎n experience like this definitely changes the way people interact,鈥 said Laflamme, who is also a founding Perimeter Institute Faculty member.

鈥淭his is the kind of thing we don鈥檛 always do incredibly well in physics 鈥 changing the environment in which people interact,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t can have a profound effect, a bonding experience, which changes the way we work together. It鈥檚 an experience that none of us will forget.鈥

As well as commemorating 15 years since the inception of the Institute for Quantum Computing, the conference also coincided, as luck would have it, with another relevant anniversary. Exactly 20 years prior to the start of the conference, physicist that helped establish quantum computing as not just an intriguing theoretical concept, but an actual real-world possibility. Kitaev鈥檚 paper provided a scheme for quantum fault-tolerance, allowing quantum processors to deal with the inevitable errors inherent to harnessing subatomic phenomena for computation.

鈥淸Kitaev鈥檚 paper] made quantum computing something that was not just a dream, but something that might actually be possible,鈥 said , former IQC PhD student聽and a Perimeter Affiliate researcher.

Wojciech Zurek delivers a talk in Frobisher Inn
Wojciech 呕urek, a pioneer in quantum information science, shares his latest research in a room overlooking Iqaluit鈥檚 Frobisher Bay.

Among the researchers who attended 鈥淨uantum in Iqaluit鈥 were peers of Kitaev鈥檚 and longtime collaborators of Laflamme鈥檚, including , , , , and others who have advanced quantum information science over the past several decades.

None of the conference participants, save for Laflamme, had ever been to Nunavut before, which is precisely what made the locale the right choice. 鈥淲e came here because I am passionate about the north, and how people here have used ingenuity to solve difficult problems for generations,鈥 said Laflamme. 鈥淭hey have persevered here for so long. I think we have a lot to learn from them.鈥

The conference also offered a chance for residents of Iqaluit to learn about the science, thanks to IQC鈥檚 travelling roadshow, . Visitors to the exhibit learned about particle polarization by making an image of Schr枚dinger鈥檚 famous cat oscillate between 鈥渁live鈥 and 鈥渄ead,鈥 and fired photons in an interactive version of the quantum double-slit experiment.

Lighting of the qudlik by an elder
The lighting of a traditional qudlik lantern welcomed researchers to Iqaluit.

The conference was launched with the lighting of a traditional Inuit oil lantern called a qudlik, by Iqaluit elder Miala Panipak. 鈥淭his is a very important thing to us, the lighting of the qudlik,鈥 Panipak, speaking in Inuktitut, said through translator Malaya Qaunirq Chapman. 鈥淲e now use it to symbolically begin important events. We are so glad all of you are here to share it with us.鈥

Following the lighting of the qudlik, local throat singers Alexia Galloway Alainga and Kristin Qaunaq performed songs that represent traditional interpretations of natural phenomena like the wind and the flow of a river.

For the researchers, whose work seeks to understand and control natural phenomena at the subatomic level, the exposure to Inuit interpretations of nature provided new perspectives on what they do as scientists.

鈥淲hen you bring together theorists and experimentalists in a very unique environment, with unique experiences, you hope that you will contribute to a tradition that is bigger than yourself,鈥 said , an IQC faculty member and Associate Faculty member at Perimeter.

On a group scavenger hunt through Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park 鈥 a rugged, 45-square-kilometre expanse carved out by glaciation 7,000 years ago 鈥 acting IQC Director chatted with colleagues about both quantum causality and the beauty of the rolling, snow-capped mountains on the horizon.

鈥淢ost of us have never had a chance to come to an amazing place like this before,鈥 Resch said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever been to a place that has inspired me to think so much about how things work 鈥 how people live, how they survive, how they thrive. It builds a sense of camaraderie to share unique experiences in a unique place. People will be talking about this meeting for a long time 鈥 not just for the scientific ideas we discussed, but for the experiences we shared.鈥

Panaroma shot of the Sylvia Grinnell Territorial Park.