Eighth
International
meeting
:
"Mathematical
Methods for Ab Initio Quantum
Chemistry"
7-8 November 2013
Laboratoire J.A. Dieudonné
CNRS et Université de Nice
Sophia Antipolis
History
The first
Nice International
meeting
on
"Mathematical
Methods
for
Ab Initio Quantum
Chemistry" in 2005 had the ambition to show that all fields of mathematics could contribute to
solve the wide variety of problems raised by quantum chemistry. Our
second meeting in 2006
emphasized discrete
versus continuous
representation problems, reduced density matrices and
Hopf algebra techniques, and group theory applications. Our third meeting in 2007 brought together leading
experts in the field of
"Geminals and other group functions". The fourth edition in 2008 focussed on
"Potential Energy Surfaces:
definitions, derivations and applications in molecular spectroscopy and
dynamics". The fifth meeting in 2009
was centered on the "new developments in
infra-red and
microwave spectroscopy and their applications to biological systems"
and the sixth meeting in 2010
on "new developments in infra-red and
microwave spectroscopy and their applications to atmospheric sciences
and astrochemistry". The
seventh meeting
was
centered on "Relativistic and electroweak quantum chemistry
".
Aims and scope
This
eighth
International meeting on "Mathematical
Methods for Ab Initio Quantum
Chemistry" will be entitled "quantum
computing with molecular qbits".
Its scope encompasses the definition of measures of entanglement, a topics related to
Brueckner orbitals in quantum chemistry, the connections between the
N-representability problem and quantum computing, the computation of
electronic energy by quantum simulation.
P. Cassam-Chenaï.
Confirmed speakers
Antonio
Acin, (ICFO, Barcelona)
Nicolas Brunner, (University of Geneva)
José Gracia Bondía, Carlos Benavides (Universidad de
Zaragoza)
Alexander Klyachko, (Bilkent University)
Örs Legeza, (Budapest University of Technology and Economics)
Kenji Mishima, (University of Tokyo)
Mary Beth Ruskai, (Tufts University)
Sébastien Tanzilli, (Université de Nice - Sophia
Antipolis)
Frank Verstaete, (Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology)
James D. Whitfield, (Vienna Center for Quantum Science and Technology)
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