Edito

In this week's IRIF letter, a PhD seminar is open to registration.
The focus is on a quanta magazine article on qubits and quantum computing.
A webinar on collaborative European projects and new calls for tender are available, such as for the young researcher programming school.

Enjoy reading and have a nice weekend!

Direction's announcements

  • Meeting room: please note that the meeting table of room 4005 has been transferred to room 4071A. Eventually, it will no longer be possible to use 4005 as a meeting room. Please check when you book room 4071A that the same time slot is not booked in room 4005.
  • Administration workload: Due to a heavy workload compounded by Natalia's departure, there may be delays in handling your requests. The secretariate is doing its best to address your needs. We appreciate your understanding and kindly request that you anticipate your requests as much as possible and take into account that it may take some days to process them.


News

  • PhD student seminar: On May 31, 2024, the seminar for doctoral students of the SIF (French Computer Science Society) will be held. This year, the seminar will focus on the theme “Diversity of research methods in computer science.” The submission deadline is March 30, 2024. More information about the event on the SIF website.


Equalities comittee

  • Functional protection FAQ: The General Directorate of Administration and Civil Service (DGAFP) just published on its website a Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) on the functional protection from which public officials can benefit: Functional protection of civil servants (in French).


Focus on

Work in constrution The Best Qubits for Quantum Computing Might Just Be Atoms

“At the end of last year, the tech giant IBM announced what might sound like a milestone in quantum computing: the first-ever chip, called the Condor, with more than 1,000 quantum bits, or qubits. Given that this was barely two years after the company unveiled the Eagle, the first chip with more than 100 qubits, it looked as though the field was racing forward. Making quantum computers that can solve useful problems beyond the scope of even the mightiest of today’s classical supercomputers demands scaling them up even more — to perhaps many tens or hundreds of thousands of qubits. But that’s surely just a matter of engineering, right?

Not necessarily. The challenges of scaling up are so great that some researchers think it will require totally different hardware from the microelectronics used by the likes of IBM and Google. The qubits in the Condor and in Google’s Sycamore chip are made from loops of superconducting material. These superconducting qubits have so far been the hare in the race to full-scale quantum computing. But now there’s a tortoise coming from behind: qubits made from individual atoms.

Recent advances have transformed these “neutral-atom qubits” from outsiders to leading contenders.”

Read the full article in Quanta Magazine.


Calls for tender and information from partners

  • Collaborative European projects: A webinar on setting up collaborative European projects organized by the Europe department of our Délégation Régionale CNRS, will be held on 16 April 2024 at 2.30pm (duration: 1.5 hours). You can register here.
  • Young Researcher Programming School: you can now register to the young researcher programming school of the GDR GPL. It will take place in Argelès-sur-Mer (Pyrénées Orientales), from June 17 to June 21, 2024. The program is available here. it is mandatory to register before May 17, 2024.
  • PARIS Recherche: the city of Paris launch its new call for tender, which aims to bring municipal action closer to research. Its aim is to fund research projects of direct relevance to the city and on themes identified by the Paris departments. You can submit your project until May 15, 2024. All informations can be found here. For more informations, please contact basile.larde@paris.fr ou DAE-recherche@paris.fr.
  • NUS calls: 3 new calls for tender between NUS (National University of Singapore) and Université Paris Cité have been published. You have until May 31, 2024 to submit. If you need information, please contact Dr. Mariana Losada, mariana@nus.edu.sg with in cc internationalisation.iro@u-paris.fr. More information on the website.
    • A research call for tender
    • A PhD international mobility call for tender
    • A educational innovation call for tender
  • 1st Joint call Paris Toronto: “The aim of the fund is to provide initial support for the development of research links and catalyze further collaboration”. If you are interested by this project please submit your application intention before May 3, 2024. The closure of the call is fixed on May 13, 2024. See the call in french or in english. Since it's a joint call, only one position can be submitted on the OVPI Application Portal.
  • JNIM 2024: The presentation materials for the speakers at the IFM research group 2024 National Conference are now available on the conference website.
  • Solemn Thesis Awards 2024: Registration for the solemn thesis awards of the Chancery will takes place through a digital platform. One award concerns scientific PhDs. The College of Doctoral Schools (CED) is responsible for centralizing and submitting the list of pre-selected candidates.
    • The deadline for sending files to the doctoral school at ufr-ed386@math.univ-paris-diderot.fr is April 8th. These files should contain 1. a cover letter in French (maximum one double-sided sheet), 2. a curriculum vitae in French (including postal, e-mail and telephone contact details), 3. a short summary of the thesis in French (between 500 and 1,000 characters maximum), 4. pre-submission reports in French or in the original language, 4. the defense report / minutes in French or in the original language, and 5. a letter of recommendation from the thesis supervisor concerning the application for the Chancellery Prize and, if applicable, of two (maximum) other members of the jury, in French or in the original language.
    • The doctoral shools will rank applications and transmit them to CED by April 23rd.
    • Pre-selected candidates will be contacted by the CED and will have to submit a complete application file by May 24, 2024.
    • More information here.
  • Open-source software training: The CNRS Institutes for Humanities & Social Sciences and for Mathematics jointly organize this training session which will address several issues related to open-source software. It will be held from Monday 1st July, 2024 at 2pm to Wednesday 3rd of July, 12:30pm at Villa Clythia in Fréjus, in-person only. You can register here.

Partner newsletter : Newsletters are sent sporadically to IRIF members. They are listed below.


Agenda for the week of April 8 to April 12

Évènement spécial · Lundi 08 avril, 15:15, SG 1013 ·
Nutan Limaye (Copenhagen), Functional Lower Bounds in Algebraic Proofs: Symmetry, Lifting, and Barriers

Algorithmes et complexité · Mardi 09 avril, 11:00, Room 3052 ·
Christoph Egger (IRIF), On Fine-Grained Key-Agreement

Combinatoire énumérative et analytique · Mardi 09 avril, 11:00, Room 3058 ·
Relâche (Vacances De Printemps), Relâche

One world numeration seminar · Mardi 09 avril, 14:00, Online ·
Simon Kristensen (Aarhus Universitet), On the distribution of sequences of the form $(q_n y)$

Catégories supérieures, polygraphes et homotopie · Vendredi 12 avril, 14:00, Room 3058 ·
Fabio Gadducci (University of Pisa), From monoidal to cartesian categories: a computational view

Automates · Vendredi 12 avril, 14:00, Room 3052 ·
Guillaume Lagarde, The complexity of learning temporal formulas from examples