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Rencontre printanière 2026 de l'INTRIQ

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Spring 2026 INTRIQ meeting

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May 27, 2026 10:55 AM

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May 28, 2026 4:30 PM

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May 27, 2026 10:55 AM

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May 28, 2026 4:30 PM

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Rencontre printanière 2026 de l'INTRIQ

Programme de la rencontre

Mercredi 27 mai

10h55  Mot d'ouverture (Salon A)

11h00  Danijela Markovic, Laboratoire Albert Fert, CNRS, France (Salon A)
            Quantum neuromorphic computing with superconducting circuits

12h00  Lunch (4 canards)

13h30  Logan Wright, Yale University, USA (Salon A)
            On the possibility of a virtuous cycle between photonics and computing

14h30  Ari Boon, Polytechnique Montréal (Salon A)
            Generalised All-Optical Cat Correction

14h55  Pause-café (Salon C)

15h40  Cunlu Zhou, Université de Sherbrooke (Salon A)
             Unlocking Quantum Computing's Power through Learning and Optimization

16h30  Quantum Ecosystem session (Salon A)

17h00  Poster session with refreshments (Salon C)

19h30  INTRIQ dinner (4 canards)

Jeudi 28 mai

9h00   Max Hays, MIT, USA (Salon A)
             Harmonics in Josephson Junction Circuits

10h00  Valentin Boettcher, McGill University (Salon A)
             Titre à venir

10h25  Pause-café (Salon C)

11h00  Robert Stockill, Co-Founder and CTO at QphoX, Netherland (Salon A)
            Titre à venir

12h00  Lunch (4 canards)

13h30  Jacob Biamonte, École de technologie supérieure (Salon A)
            Tensor network normal forms

14h20  Aleksandr Berezutskii, Université de Sherbrooke (Salon A)
            Tensor-Network Decoding for Multi-Qubit Quantum LDPC Codes

14h45  Pause-café (Salon C)

15h15  Abhijeet Alase, Concordia University (Salon A)
           Efficient quantum algorithm for solving differential equations with Fourier nonlinearity via Koopman linearization

16h05  Jean-Baptiste Waring, École de technologie supérieure (Salon A)
             Robust GHZ State Preparation via Majority-Voted Boundary Measurements

16h25  Mot de clôture (Salon A)

Conférencière invitée et conférenciers invités

Danijela Markovic, PhD

Chercheuse, Laboratoire Albert Fert, CNRS/Thales, France
Quantum neuromorphic computing with superconducting circuits
Neuromorphic computing aims to implement neural-network–like information processing directly in hardware. Beyond conventional, isomorphic architectures that mimic the topology of neurons interconnected through synapses, non-isomorphic approaches harness more general physical systems and their intrinsic dynamics to perform computation. In this framework, input data are encoded in one of the control parameters of a physical system whose nonlinear response, governed by tunable parameters, enables complex transformations without explicitly reproducing neural network structures. Nonlinearity, which is essential for information processing, can arise from the intrinsic system dynamics, the encoding of input data, and, in quantum systems, from the measurement process through quantum back-action.
Key challenges in the field include identifying how to harness the natural evolution of a physical system for useful computation, understanding the physical origins of computational expressivity, and developing efficient training strategies adapted to quantum hardware. In this talk, I will present our recent experimental and numerical investigations of these questions using parametrically coupled bosonic modes implemented with superconducting circuits. I will discuss how encoding, control parameters, and measured observables shape the system dynamics [Dudas, npj Quant. Info., (2023); Carles, PRApplied (2026)], together with the training strategies we have explored, including model-based approaches such as backpropagation [Dudas, Sci. Rep., (2026)], and ongoing efforts towards physics-based approaches such as equilibrium propagation. These results highlight how quantum dynamics can be leveraged for neuromorphic computation.

Logan Wright

Professeur, Yale University, États-Unis
On the possibility of a virtuous cycle between photonics and computing
Are we at the dawn of a new era for photonics, or merely the peak of the latest vacuous fad? A few signs (and plenty of hype) suggest that the relationship between photonics, computation, and the economy could change radically over the next decade, with photonics becoming more centrally involved in computers, and computers, as the substrate of artificial intelligence, becoming more centrally involved in pretty much everything. In this talk, I'll outline how this revolution could occur, why it would (if it actually occurs) be perhaps the single most significant development in photonics in my lifetime, how it could naturally segue into scalable quantum photonic processors, and finally, why and where it is likely to fail. I will then discuss how we as a field can improve the odds of success, and why we should be optimistic about a bright photonic future either way.

Max Hays, PhD

Chercheur, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, États-Unis
Harmonics in Josephson Junction Circuits
Josephson tunnel junctions are essential elements of superconducting quantum circuits. While it is typically assumed that these junctions possess a 2π-periodic sinusoidal potential, higher-order “harmonic” corrections can drastically modify the overall circuit properties.
In this talk, I will discuss two avenues of research in our group related to harmonics. In the first, we investigate the source of unanticipated harmonics in standard tunnel junctions. Two potential sources are the intrinsic Andreev processes intrinsic to the Josephson junction and the inductance of the metallic traces connecting the junction to other circuit elements. In our recent work [Kim et al., Nature Physics (2026)], we developed a method to distinguish between these two sources using superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). The observed scaling of the second harmonic with Josephson-junction size indicates that it is due almost entirely to the trace inductance in our devices. These results inform the design of next-generation superconducting circuits for quantum information processing and the investigation of the supercurrent diode effect.
The second avenue of research involves leveraging harmonics to realize a noise-resilient qubit. In our recent theoretical work [Hays et al., PRX Quantum (2025)], we engineered harmonic amplitudes to create a periodic potential with two non-degenerate minima. The qubit, which we dub “harmonium”, is formed from the lowest-energy states of each minimum. Bit-flip protection of the qubit arises due to the localization of each qubit state to their respective minima, while phase-flip protection can be understood by considering the circuit within the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. We will discuss the operating principles of this qubit and progress towards experimental realization.

Robert Stockill, PhD

Co-fondateur et directeur de la technologie à QphoX, Pays-Bas
Titre à venir

Conférenciers de l'écosystème quantique

Les conférenciers et conférencières de l'écosystème seront annoné(e)s prochainement

Conférenciers INTRIQ

Abhijeet Alase

Professeur, Université Concordia
Efficient quantum algorithm for solving differential equations with Fourier nonlinearity via Koopman linearization
Quantum algorithms offer an exponential advantage with respect to the number of dependent variables for solving certain nonlinear ordinary differential equations (ODEs). These algorithms typically begin by transforming the original nonlinear ODE into a higher-dimensional linear ODE using a linearization technique, most commonly Carleman linearization. Existing works restrict their analysis to ODEs where the nonlinearities are polynomial functions of the dependent variables, significantly limiting their applicability. In this work we construct an efficient quantum algorithm for solving ODEs with ‘Fourier’ nonlinear terms. To tackle the Fourier nonlinear term, which is not expressible as a finite sum of polynomials of u, our algorithm employs a generalization of the Carleman linearization technique known as Koopman linearization. We also make other methodological advances towards relaxing the stringent dissipativity condition required for efficient solution extraction and towards integrated readout of classical quantities from the solution state. Our results open avenues to the development of efficient quantum algorithms for a significantly wider class of high-dimensional nonlinear ODEs, thereby broadening the scope of their applications.

Aleksandr Berezutskii

Doctorant, Université de Sherbrooke
Directeur: Stéfanos Kourtis
Tensor-Network Decoding For Multi-Qubit Quantum LDPC Codes
Protecting quantum information from noise requires efficient decoding algorithms for quantum error-correcting codes. Quantum low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes encode multiple logical qubits with sparse parity checks, offering a dramatically better ratio of logical to physical qubits than the surface code. However, exact maximum likelihood decoding requires optimizing over 4k logical classes which is exponentially large in the number of encoded qubits k. This makes exact decoding infeasible in the general case. We introduce a code-agnostic tensor-network decoder for CSS quantum error-correcting codes that operates in this multi-qubit regime. The decoder represents the posterior probability distribution over Pauli errors as a matrix product state (MPS), enforces the code’s stabilizer and logical constraints via sequential matrix product operator (MPO) applications, and marginalizes over the physical degrees of freedom. We validate the decoder on several code families of increasing complexity. The decoder achieves logical failure rates at the same order of magnitude as state-of-the-art specialized decoders on these codes without any code-specific tuning, establishing it as a practical benchmarking tool for new code families. The full pipeline is implemented in the open-source Python library mdopt.

Ari Boon

Doctorant, Polytechnique Montréal
Directeur: Nicolas Quesada
Generalised All-Optical Cat Correction
We have generalised an all-optical telecorrection protocol for the higher orders of the cat code, and show that with these higher orders we can achieve target performance at substantially reduced iteration counts at the cost of a higher mean photon-number. We also introduce a probabilistic scheme for correcting deformation of the state, which highlights two interesting abilities of telecorrection: to encode new sets of transformations, and to change the basis of the code. We find that for a target channel fidelity of 99.9% over a channel with 1 dB of loss, a third-order cat code requires 70 times fewer telecorrection iterations than a first-order one, at a cost of a 3.6-fold increase in mean photon-number.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03263

Cunlu Zhou

Professeur, Université de Sherbrooke
Unlocking Quantum Computing's Power through Learning and Optimization
Quantum computing promises to revolutionize computation by solving problems and enabling discoveries that are impractical for classical computers alone. Despite rapid progress in quantum hardware, from noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) processors with hundreds of physical qubits to emerging early fault-tolerant quantum (EFTQ) architectures with potentially hundreds of logical qubits and millions of logical gates, realizing this promise will ultimately depend on developing algorithms and enabling tools that can effectively harness limited and imperfect quantum resources.

In this talk, I will discuss how learning and optimization can serve as two main engines for unlocking the power of quantum computing. I will present some recent results on classical shadows, error mitigation, and generative learning of optimal quantum measurements, highlighting how these developments can lead to more efficient, noise-resilient, and practically useful quantum algorithms.

Jacob Biamonte

Professeur, École de technologie supérieure
Tensor network normal forms
We introduce tensor-guards as a primitive semantic layer for tensor network graphical calculi. Guard collapse induces sector invariants that recover tensor-network contraction semantics for counting and satisfiability. The Biamonte–Clark–Jaksch and ZX/W/scalar normal forms emerge as scalar-enriched compositions of guards, while a third algebraic normal form arises from complementary halves of a shared collapsed guard structure.

Jean-Baptiste Waring

Doctorant, École de technologie supérieure
Directeur: Christophe Père
Robust GHZ State Preparation via Majority-Voted Boundary Measurements
Preparing high-fidelity Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states on noisy quantum hardware remains challenging due to cumulative gate errors and decoherence. We introduce Group-Majority-Voting (Group-MV), a dynamic-circuit protocol that partitions arbitrary coupling graphs, prepares local GHZ states in parallel, and fuses them via majority-voted mid-circuit measurements. The majority vote over redundant boundary links mitigates measurement errors that would otherwise propagate through classical feedforward. We evaluate Group-MV on simulated Heavy-hex and Grid topologies for 30 through 60 qubits under a realistic noise regime. Group-MV generalizes to arbitrary GHZ sizes on arbitrary coupling topologies, achieving 2.4x higher fidelity than the Line Dynamic method while tracking the unitary baseline within 3%.

Valentin Boettcher

Doctorant, Université McGill
Directeur: Bill Coish
Titre à venir

Session d'affiches

Abhinav Sinha

Doctorante, Université McGill
Directeur: Kai Wang
Fisher Optimized Multiplane Light Conversion for Quantum Parameter Estimation
We propose a self-optimizing photonic neural network based on multiplane light conversion (MPLC) for quantum parameter estimation. Unlike static mode sorters, our system adaptively learns measurement strategies by maximizing Classical Fisher Information (CFI) using a simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation algorithm. We demonstrate this on the two-point source separation problem. Our approach achieves near-optimal precision (reaching the Quantum Fisher Information limit) and maintains robustness against centroid misalignment, outperforming standard direct imaging and spatial mode demultiplexing methods.

Aditya Chugh

Étudiant à la maîtrise, Université McGill
Directrice: Tami Pereg-Barnea
Titre à venir

Charles Khoury

Stagiaire, Université de Sherbrooke
Directeur: Stéfanos Kourtis
Titre à venir

Guanyi Heng

Doctorant, École de technologie supérieure
Directeur: Jacob Biamonte
Title to be announced

Ilya Iakoub

Étudiant à la maîtrise, Université de Montréal
Directeur: Richard MacKenzie
Topological edge states in one dimensional insulators as exceptional points of the Hamiltonian
We provide a physically insightful derivation of Bulk-Boundary Correspondence for one dimensional semi-infinite chains. To do so, we analytically continue the Bloch Hamiltonian and interpret states with zeros in its sublattices as (not necessarily topological) edge states. In the analytically continued Bloch Hamiltonian, chiral symmetry leads to the existence of exceptional points corresponding to topological edge states. Through this insight, the quantization of the Berry phase can be attributed to the presence of exceptional points in the analytically continued Hamiltonian. Finally, we derive winding numbers that count the numbers of topological and non-topological edge states. This winding is, contrary to the Zak phase, independent of the choice of unit cell.

Isaac Lagaud

Étudiant à la maîtrise, NRC Ottawa
Directeur: Louis Gaudreau
Exploring Alternative Layered Materials as Gate Dielectrics for 2D Material Based Devices
The performance and scalability of two-dimensional (2D) based quantum devices are strongly influenced by the choice of gate dielectric. In gate-defined quantum devices high-κ dielectrics improve electrostatic tunability, and reduce gate leakage. Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), a 2D layered material, has become a widely used dielectric due to the clean interface it forms with 2D materials and its wide band gap. However, its relatively low dielectric constant (κ ≈ 2.5–4) [1] limits the gate capacitance, and incidentally the charge carrier density.
This project aims to explore Lanthanum OxyBromide (LaOBr) as an alternative crystalline layered dielectric. Its properties such as a high dielectric constant, large band gap, and its compatibility with van der Waals heterostructures [2] makes it a promising material to overcome the limitations of hBN while preserving the benefits of a 2D-2D interface.
To evaluate LaOBr as a suitable gate dielectric, we fabricated 2D-based field-effect devices and characterized key electrical properties, focusing on the gate leakage current, device carrier mobility, gate dielectric breakdown, and dielectric constant. This work will prompt the study of other layered high k dielectrics as alternatives to hBN, providing additional tuning knobs for heterostructure fabrication.
[1] J. Boddison-Chouinard, et al. npj 2D Mater Appl 7, 50 (2023)
[2] A. Soll et al ACS Nano 2024, 18, 15, 10397–10406 (2024)

Kylian Lionnet

Stagiaire, Université de Montréal
Directeur: Richard MacKenzie
A study of new types of states in generalized SSH systems
The Su–Schrieffer–Heeger (SSH) model is a fundamental example of topology in one-dimensional lattices. When extended to include longer-range hopping (SSH-N models), the structure of eigenstates becomes significantly more complex and remains only partially understood.
We analyze these generalized models using Bloch theory and numerical methods to determine their band structures and eigenmodes. We show that both the number and nature of eigenstates depend strongly on the unit cell geometry and coupling parameters.
Unlike the standard SSH model, extended hopping leads to new classes of solutions, including additional bulk states and exponentially localized modes. These results provide a framework for engineering novel quantum states in one-dimensional systems.

Lorraine Tsitsi Majiri

‍Étudiante à la maîtrise, Université de Sherbrooke
Directeur: Stéfanos Kourtis
Titre à venir

Michael Caouette-Mansour

Doctorant, Université McGill
Directeur: Jack Sankey
High Mode Matching Fiber Fabry Perot Cavity
We optimize the fiber/optical cavity interfaces to improve the coupling between the cavity mode and the fiber mode. This aims to address a significant source of loss in quantum communications and to enhance measurements using Fabry-Perot cavities coupled to optical fibers.
Our method involves measuring the glass-air reflection inside the fiber during its preparation, before the deposition of the mirror. This information, combined with surface profilometry, allows us to predict the coupling.
Based on our results with single-mode fiber, we predict a coupling efficiency exceeding 95% on the flat side of a plano-convex cavity. As a result, this coupling will no longer be a limiting factor in the quantum efficiency of these systems.

Nicolas Levasseur

Doctorant, Université de Montréal
Directeur: Richard MacKenzie
Étude de la chaîne de Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) avec un soliton parfaitement localisé
On étudie l’impact sur les états et énergies propres du modèle SSH de l’ajout d’un soliton parfaitement localisé à la frontière entre deux configurations topologiques. On observe l’apparition d’états d’interfaces de hautes (k imaginaire) et de basses (k complexe) énergies dans le cas infini. Pour le cas fini, on observe que les états de bord du modèle SSH usuel peuvent s’hybrider avec ces nouveaux états. On trouve aussi les points critiques entre les différentes configuration du système. On finit par une étude numérique de l’ajout de bruit au système.

Omid Hosseinzadeh

Doctorant, Polytechnique Montréal
Directeur: Stéphane Kéna-Cohen
Intensity squeezed single photon sources at room temperature from organic molecules

Pacôme Gasnier

Stagiaire, École de technologie supérieure
Directeur: Jacob Biamonte
Titre à venir

Polina Blinova

Doctorant, Université McGill
Directeur: Kay Wang
Titre à venir

Samuel Wolski

Doctorant, Université de Sherbrooke
Directeur: Mathieu Juan
Characterizing disordered superconductor CPWs under magnetic field

Zhongan  Lin

Doctorant, Université McGill
Directeur: Kai Wang
A proposal for all-optical on-chip implementation of the bosonic Kitaev chain

Spring 2026 INTRIQ meeting

Meeting program

Wednesday May 27th

10:55  Opening remarks (Salon A)

11:00  Danijela Markovic, Laboratoire Albert Fert, CNRS, France (Salon A)
           Quantum neuromorphic computing with superconducting circuits

12:00  Lunch (4 canards)

13:30  Logan Wright, Yale University, USA (Salon A)
           On the possibility of a virtuous cycle between photonics and computing

14:30  Ari Boon, Polytechnique Montréal (Salon A)
           Generalised All-Optical Cat Correction

14:55  Coffee break (Salon C)

15:40  Cunlu Zhou, Université de Sherbrooke (Salon A)
            Unlocking Quantum Computing's Power through Learning and Optimization

16:30  Quantum Ecosystem session (Salon A)

17:00  Poster session with refreshments (Salon C)

19:30  INTRIQ dinner (4 canards)

Thursday May 28th

9:00   Max Hays, MIT, USA (Salon A)
           Harmonics in Josephson Junction Circuits

10:00  Valentin Boettcher, McGill University (Salon A)
            Title to be announced

10:25  Coffee break (Salon C)

11:00  Robert Stockill, Co-Founder and CTO at QphoX, Netherland (Salon A)
           Title to be announced

12:00  Lunch (4 canards)

13:30  Jacob Biamonte, École de technologie supérieure (Salon A)
           Tensor network normal forms

14:20  Aleksandr Berezutskii, Université de Sherbrooke (Salon A)
           Tensor-Network Decoding for Multi-Qubit Quantum LDPC Codes

14:45  Coffee break (Salon C)

15:15  Abhijeet Alase, Concordia University (Salon A)
           Efficient quantum algorithm for solving differential equations with Fourier nonlinearity via Koopman linearization

16:05  Jean-Baptiste Waring, École de technologie supérieure (Salon A)
            Robust GHZ State Preparation via Majority-Voted Boundary Measurements

16:25  Closing remarks (Salon A)

Invited speakers

Dr. Danijela Markovic

Researcher, Laboratoire Albert Fert, CNRS/Thales, France
Quantum neuromorphic computing with superconducting circuits
Neuromorphic computing aims to implement neural-network–like information processing directly in hardware. Beyond conventional, isomorphic architectures that mimic the topology of neurons interconnected through synapses, non-isomorphic approaches harness more general physical systems and their intrinsic dynamics to perform computation. In this framework, input data are encoded in one of the control parameters of a physical system whose nonlinear response, governed by tunable parameters, enables complex transformations without explicitly reproducing neural network structures. Nonlinearity, which is essential for information processing, can arise from the intrinsic system dynamics, the encoding of input data, and, in quantum systems, from the measurement process through quantum back-action.
Key challenges in the field include identifying how to harness the natural evolution of a physical system for useful computation, understanding the physical origins of computational expressivity, and developing efficient training strategies adapted to quantum hardware. In this talk, I will present our recent experimental and numerical investigations of these questions using parametrically coupled bosonic modes implemented with superconducting circuits. I will discuss how encoding, control parameters, and measured observables shape the system dynamics [Dudas, npj Quant. Info., (2023); Carles, PRApplied (2026)], together with the training strategies we have explored, including model-based approaches such as backpropagation [Dudas, Sci. Rep., (2026)], and ongoing efforts towards physics-based approaches such as equilibrium propagation. These results highlight how quantum dynamics can be leveraged for neuromorphic computation.

Pr. Logan Wright

Yale University, USA
On the possibility of a virtuous cycle between photonics and computing
Are we at the dawn of a new era for photonics, or merely the peak of the latest vacuous fad? A few signs (and plenty of hype) suggest that the relationship between photonics, computation, and the economy could change radically over the next decade, with photonics becoming more centrally involved in computers, and computers, as the substrate of artificial intelligence, becoming more centrally involved in pretty much everything. In this talk, I'll outline how this revolution could occur, why it would (if it actually occurs) be perhaps the single most significant development in photonics in my lifetime, how it could naturally segue into scalable quantum photonic processors, and finally, why and where it is likely to fail. I will then discuss how we as a field can improve the odds of success, and why we should be optimistic about a bright photonic future either way.

Dr. Max Hays

Researcher, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Harmonics in Josephson Junction Circuits
Josephson tunnel junctions are essential elements of superconducting quantum circuits. While it is typically assumed that these junctions possess a 2π-periodic sinusoidal potential, higher-order “harmonic” corrections can drastically modify the overall circuit properties.
In this talk, I will discuss two avenues of research in our group related to harmonics. In the first, we investigate the source of unanticipated harmonics in standard tunnel junctions. Two potential sources are the intrinsic Andreev processes intrinsic to the Josephson junction and the inductance of the metallic traces connecting the junction to other circuit elements. In our recent work [Kim et al., Nature Physics (2026)], we developed a method to distinguish between these two sources using superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs). The observed scaling of the second harmonic with Josephson-junction size indicates that it is due almost entirely to the trace inductance in our devices. These results inform the design of next-generation superconducting circuits for quantum information processing and the investigation of the supercurrent diode effect.
The second avenue of research involves leveraging harmonics to realize a noise-resilient qubit. In our recent theoretical work [Hays et al., PRX Quantum (2025)], we engineered harmonic amplitudes to create a periodic potential with two non-degenerate minima. The qubit, which we dub “harmonium”, is formed from the lowest-energy states of each minimum. Bit-flip protection of the qubit arises due to the localization of each qubit state to their respective minima, while phase-flip protection can be understood by considering the circuit within the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. We will discuss the operating principles of this qubit and progress towards experimental realization.

Dr. Robert Stockill

Co-Founder and CTO at QphoX, Netherland
Title to be announced

Quantum Ecosystem

Speakers to be announced

INTRIQ speakers

Pr. Abhijeet Alase

Concordia University
Efficient quantum algorithm for solving differential equations with Fourier nonlinearity via Koopman linearization
Quantum algorithms offer an exponential advantage with respect to the number of dependent variables for solving certain nonlinear ordinary differential equations (ODEs). These algorithms typically begin by transforming the original nonlinear ODE into a higher-dimensional linear ODE using a linearization technique, most commonly Carleman linearization. Existing works restrict their analysis to ODEs where the nonlinearities are polynomial functions of the dependent variables, significantly limiting their applicability. In this work we construct an efficient quantum algorithm for solving ODEs with ‘Fourier’ nonlinear terms. To tackle the Fourier nonlinear term, which is not expressible as a finite sum of polynomials of u, our algorithm employs a generalization of the Carleman linearization technique known as Koopman linearization. We also make other methodological advances towards relaxing the stringent dissipativity condition required for efficient solution extraction and towards integrated readout of classical quantities from the solution state. Our results open avenues to the development of efficient quantum algorithms for a significantly wider class of high-dimensional nonlinear ODEs, thereby broadening the scope of their applications.

Aleksandr Berezutskii

PhD student, Université de Sherbrooke
Director: Stéfanos Kourtis
Tensor-Network Decoding For Multi-Qubit Quantum LDPC Codes
Protecting quantum information from noise requires efficient decoding algorithms for quantum error-correcting codes. Quantum low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes encode multiple logical qubits with sparse parity checks, offering a dramatically better ratio of logical to physical qubits than the surface code. However, exact maximum likelihood decoding requires optimizing over 4k logical classes which is exponentially large in the number of encoded qubits k. This makes exact decoding infeasible in the general case. We introduce a code-agnostic tensor-network decoder for CSS quantum error-correcting codes that operates in this multi-qubit regime. The decoder represents the posterior probability distribution over Pauli errors as a matrix product state (MPS), enforces the code’s stabilizer and logical constraints via sequential matrix product operator (MPO) applications, and marginalizes over the physical degrees of freedom. We validate the decoder on several code families of increasing complexity. The decoder achieves logical failure rates at the same order of magnitude as state-of-the-art specialized decoders on these codes without any code-specific tuning, establishing it as a practical benchmarking tool for new code families. The full pipeline is implemented in the open-source Python library mdopt.

Ari Boon

PhÐ student, Polytechnique Montréal
Director: Nicolas Quesada
Generalised All-Optical Cat Correction
We have generalised an all-optical telecorrection protocol for the higher orders of the cat code, and show that with these higher orders we can achieve target performance at substantially reduced iteration counts at the cost of a higher mean photon-number. We also introduce a probabilistic scheme for correcting deformation of the state, which highlights two interesting abilities of telecorrection: to encode new sets of transformations, and to change the basis of the code. We find that for a target channel fidelity of 99.9% over a channel with 1 dB of loss, a third-order cat code requires 70 times fewer telecorrection iterations than a first-order one, at a cost of a 3.6-fold increase in mean photon-number.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03263

Pr. Cunlu Zhou

Université de Sherbrooke
Unlocking Quantum Computing's Power through Learning and Optimization
Quantum computing promises to revolutionize computation by solving problems and enabling discoveries that are impractical for classical computers alone. Despite rapid progress in quantum hardware, from noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) processors with hundreds of physical qubits to emerging early fault-tolerant quantum (EFTQ) architectures with potentially hundreds of logical qubits and millions of logical gates, realizing this promise will ultimately depend on developing algorithms and enabling tools that can effectively harness limited and imperfect quantum resources.

In this talk, I will discuss how learning and optimization can serve as two main engines for unlocking the power of quantum computing. I will present some recent results on classical shadows, error mitigation, and generative learning of optimal quantum measurements, highlighting how these developments can lead to more efficient, noise-resilient, and practically useful quantum algorithms.

Pr. Jacob Biamonte

École de technologie supérieure
Tensor network normal forms
We introduce tensor-guards as a primitive semantic layer for tensor network graphical calculi. Guard collapse induces sector invariants that recover tensor-network contraction semantics for counting and satisfiability. The Biamonte–Clark–Jaksch and ZX/W/scalar normal forms emerge as scalar-enriched compositions of guards, while a third algebraic normal form arises from complementary halves of a shared collapsed guard structure.

Jean-Baptiste Waring

PhD student, École de technologie supérieure
Director: Christophe Père
Robust GHZ State Preparation via Majority-Voted Boundary Measurements
Preparing high-fidelity Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states on noisy quantum hardware remains challenging due to cumulative gate errors and decoherence. We introduce Group-Majority-Voting (Group-MV), a dynamic-circuit protocol that partitions arbitrary coupling graphs, prepares local GHZ states in parallel, and fuses them via majority-voted mid-circuit measurements. The majority vote over redundant boundary links mitigates measurement errors that would otherwise propagate through classical feedforward. We evaluate Group-MV on simulated Heavy-hex and Grid topologies for 30 through 60 qubits under a realistic noise regime. Group-MV generalizes to arbitrary GHZ sizes on arbitrary coupling topologies, achieving 2.4x higher fidelity than the Line Dynamic method while tracking the unitary baseline within 3%.

Valentin Boettcher

PhD student, McGill University
Director: Bill Coish
Title to be announced

Poster session

Abhinav Sinha

PhD student, McGill University
Director: Kai Wang
Fisher Optimized Multiplane Light Conversion for Quantum Parameter Estimation
We propose a self-optimizing photonic neural network based on multiplane light conversion (MPLC) for quantum parameter estimation. Unlike static mode sorters, our system adaptively learns measurement strategies by maximizing Classical Fisher Information (CFI) using a simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation algorithm. We demonstrate this on the two-point source separation problem. Our approach achieves near-optimal precision (reaching the Quantum Fisher Information limit) and maintains robustness against centroid misalignment, outperforming standard direct imaging and spatial mode demultiplexing methods.

Aditya Chugh

Master student, McGill University
Director: Tami Pereg-Barnea
Title to be announced

Charles Khoury

Intern, Université de Sherbrooke
Director: Stéfanos Kourtis
Title to be announced

Guanyi Heng

PhD student, École de technologie supérieure
Director: Jacob Biamonte
Title to be announced

Ilya Iakoub

Master student, Université de Montréal
Director: Richard MacKenzie
Topological edge states in one dimensional insulators as exceptional points of the Hamiltonian
We provide a physically insightful derivation of Bulk-Boundary Correspondence for one dimensional semi-infinite chains. To do so, we analytically continue the Bloch Hamiltonian and interpret states with zeros in its sublattices as (not necessarily topological) edge states. In the analytically continued Bloch Hamiltonian, chiral symmetry leads to the existence of exceptional points corresponding to topological edge states. Through this insight, the quantization of the Berry phase can be attributed to the presence of exceptional points in the analytically continued Hamiltonian. Finally, we derive winding numbers that count the numbers of topological and non-topological edge states. This winding is, contrary to the Zak phase, independent of the choice of unit cell.

Isaac Lagaud

Master student, NRC Ottawa
Director: Louis Gaudreau
Exploring Alternative Layered Materials as Gate Dielectrics for 2D Material Based Devices
The performance and scalability of two-dimensional (2D) based quantum devices are strongly influenced by the choice of gate dielectric. In gate-defined quantum devices high-κ dielectrics improve electrostatic tunability, and reduce gate leakage. Hexagonal boron nitride (hBN), a 2D layered material, has become a widely used dielectric due to the clean interface it forms with 2D materials and its wide band gap. However, its relatively low dielectric constant (κ ≈ 2.5–4) [1] limits the gate capacitance, and incidentally the charge carrier density.
This project aims to explore Lanthanum OxyBromide (LaOBr) as an alternative crystalline layered dielectric. Its properties such as a high dielectric constant, large band gap, and its compatibility with van der Waals heterostructures [2] makes it a promising material to overcome the limitations of hBN while preserving the benefits of a 2D-2D interface.
To evaluate LaOBr as a suitable gate dielectric, we fabricated 2D-based field-effect devices and characterized key electrical properties, focusing on the gate leakage current, device carrier mobility, gate dielectric breakdown, and dielectric constant. This work will prompt the study of other layered high k dielectrics as alternatives to hBN, providing additional tuning knobs for heterostructure fabrication.
[1] J. Boddison-Chouinard, et al. npj 2D Mater Appl 7, 50 (2023)
[2] A. Soll et al ACS Nano 2024, 18, 15, 10397–10406 (2024)

Jérémy Peltier

PhD student, Université de Montréal
Director: Philippe St-Jean
Anomalous Quantum Hall Effect for Light
We report an anomalous Hall effect for light confined in a silicon-based photonic crystal. A pseudo-magnetic field is induced through a spatial deformation of a honeycomb lattice. We further observe a polarization-dependent transverse drift through the implementation of an artificial electric field.

Kylian Lionnet

Intern, Université de Montréal
Director: Richard MacKenzie
A study of new types of states in generalized SSH systems
The Su–Schrieffer–Heeger (SSH) model is a fundamental example of topology in one-dimensional lattices. When extended to include longer-range hopping (SSH-N models), the structure of eigenstates becomes significantly more complex and remains only partially understood.
We analyze these generalized models using Bloch theory and numerical methods to determine their band structures and eigenmodes. We show that both the number and nature of eigenstates depend strongly on the unit cell geometry and coupling parameters.
Unlike the standard SSH model, extended hopping leads to new classes of solutions, including additional bulk states and exponentially localized modes. These results provide a framework for engineering novel quantum states in one-dimensional systems.

Lorraine Tsitsi Majiri

Master student, Université de Sherbrooke
Directeur: Stéfanos Kourtis
Title to be announced

Michael Caouette-Mansour

PhD student, McGill University
Director: Jack Sankey
High Mode Matching Fiber Fabry Perot Cavity
We optimize the fiber/optical cavity interfaces to improve the coupling between the cavity mode and the fiber mode. This aims to address a significant source of loss in quantum communications and to enhance measurements using Fabry-Perot cavities coupled to optical fibers.
Our method involves measuring the glass-air reflection inside the fiber during its preparation, before the deposition of the mirror. This information, combined with surface profilometry, allows us to predict the coupling.
Based on our results with single-mode fiber, we predict a coupling efficiency exceeding 95% on the flat side of a plano-convex cavity. As a result, this coupling will no longer be a limiting factor in the quantum efficiency of these systems.

Nicolas Levasseur

PhD student, Université de Montréal
Director: Richard MacKenzie
Étude de la chaîne de Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (SSH) avec un soliton parfaitement localisé
On étudie l’impact sur les états et énergies propres du modèle SSH de l’ajout d’un soliton parfaitement localisé à la frontière entre deux configurations topologiques. On observe l’apparition d’états d’interfaces de hautes (k imaginaire) et de basses (k complexe) énergies dans le cas infini. Pour le cas fini, on observe que les états de bord du modèle SSH usuel peuvent s’hybrider avec ces nouveaux états. On trouve aussi les points critiques entre les différentes configuration du système. On finit par une étude numérique de l’ajout de bruit au système.

Omid Hosseinzadeh

PhD student, Polytechnique Montréal
Director: Stéphane Kéna-Cohen
Intensity squeezed single photon sources at room temperature from organic molecules

Pacôme Gasnier

Intern, École de technologie supérieure
Director: Jacob Biamonte
Title to be announced

Polina Blinova

PhD student, McGill University
Director: Kay Wang
Title to be announced

Samuel Wolski

PhD student, Université de Sherbrooke
Director: Mathieu Juan
Characterizing disordered superconductor CPWs under magnetic field

Zhongan  Lin

PhD Student, McGill University
Director: Kai Wang
A proposal for all-optical on-chip implementation of the bosonic Kitaev chain

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