Quantum technology has the potential to become one of the major innovation drivers in the 21st century
- Close cooperation between science and industry a key success factor
- For two days, around 300 international experts discussed the future of and fields of application for quantum technologies at ZEISS in Oberkochen
- ZEISS Research Awards presented to Swiss researchers
For the second time since 2016, ZEISS hosted a high-caliber symposium to promote the exchange of ideas between international researchers and representatives from industry. The experts convened at the company's headquarters in Oberkochen for two days.
Quantum sensors are just around the corner
At the beginning of the Symposium, the keynote speakers Dr. Heike Riel, (IBM Research, Switzerland), Prof. Dr. Jörg Wrachtrup (University of Stuttgart) and Prof. Dr. Christine Silberhorn (University of Paderborn) presented the current state of their research. The discussion continued in workshops on subjects like quantum computers, quantum sensors and quantum communication. The results of this event will be developed further and then published as a White Paper on the ZEISS website.
At the closing panel of the Symposium, Dr. Michael Bolle, Head of Research at Bosch, and Dr. Wilhelm Kaenders, President of the company Toptica Photonics, discussed these topics together with the three keynote speakers. Bolle already anticipates the launch of the first quantum sensors in the next five years. Kaenders stressed that Europe needs lighthouse projects to convince the public that tax revenue should be used to support quantum technology. Moreover, the panel participants called for increased efforts to improve networking between physicists and engineers, and for setting up an ecosystem in order to bridge the gap between research and practice.
Quantum physicists from Switzerland receive prestigious award
This year's two award winners demonstrate how well-positioned Europe is in the sciences. Both researchers, Tobias Kippenberg, Professor at the Laboratory of Photonics and Quantum Measurements at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), and Jean-Pierre Wolf, Professor at the Biophotonics Institute at the University of Geneva, were honored for their achievements in the area of quantum physics over the past decades.
Controlling the weather and altering movements with light rays
In his speech introducing the award winners, Dr. Jürgen Mlynek, Professor at the Humboldt University and former President of the Helmholtz-Association, emphasized what is special about their very different research areas. Wolf has used the laser to not only measure weather phenomena, but also to alter and control these. His goals include triggering targeted lightning strikes and managing their impact to ultimately prevent extreme weather. Kippenberg's research has demonstrated that, by using microresonators, the faint forces exerted by light rays can be used to measure and cool mechanical movements in the quantum regime. It should be noted that four previous winners of the ZEISS Research Award went on to receive the Noble Prize.
The Quantum Symposium is part of the "Rethinking Education" initiative ZEISS launched in 2018. Other related events will be held almost every month, including the STEM festival in Jena and the Robotic Innovation Challenge at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). More information about the initiative can be found on a dedicated website.
Further information on the ZEISS Symposium and the ZEISS Research Award:
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