Events

Seminars, panels, and workshops with leading quantum researchers

TT26 Term Card

Trinity Term 2026. Click any event for details

Week 1

Angela Sara Cacciapuoti (University of Naples Federico II)

Quantum-Native Networking: From Entanglement Orchestration to Protocol Organization

About the Speaker

Angela Sara Cacciapuoti is a Professor at the University of Naples Federico II and an ERC Consolidator Grant holder. Her research focuses on quantum internet design, arguing that the classical internet's layered architecture is fundamentally unsuitable for quantum networks. She advocates for quantum-native design principles including entanglement orchestration, quantum-aware routing, and flexible protocol composition.

Abstract

The classical internet's layered architecture was designed for transmitting classical bits and is fundamentally unsuitable for a quantum internet. This talk makes the case for quantum-native design principles — entanglement orchestration, quantum-aware routing, and flexible protocol composition rather than rigid layering. We explore how to rethink networking from the ground up to support the unique demands of quantum communication, from entanglement distribution to distributed quantum computing.

Venue

Online via Zoom

Week 2

Siddarth K. Joshi (University of Bristol)

Wavelength-Multiplexed Entanglement Distribution Networks

About the Speaker

Siddarth K. Joshi is a researcher at the University of Bristol who pioneered wavelength-multiplexed entanglement distribution since 2018. He also built the quantum transmitter payload for the SPOQC satellite. His work focuses on network architecture and ongoing research into the reliability and scalability of entanglement distribution networks.

Abstract

Wavelength-multiplexed entanglement distribution offers a scalable route to multi-user quantum networks by sharing entangled photon pairs across many channels simultaneously. This talk covers the network architecture behind wavelength-multiplexed entanglement distribution, from the foundational 2018 experiments to ongoing work on reliability and scalability, as well as the quantum transmitter payload developed for the SPOQC satellite mission.

Venue

St Hilda's College (in-person)

Week 3

Daniel Oi (University of Strathclyde)

Satellite Quantum Communications

About the Speaker

Daniel Oi did his DPhil at Oxford under Artur Ekert and now leads research at the University of Strathclyde spanning quantum theory, computation, and space quantum technologies. His work bridges fundamental quantum science with practical satellite-based quantum communication systems.

Abstract

Exponential loss in optical fibre fundamentally limits the reach of terrestrial quantum communications. Satellite links offer a way to overcome this barrier. This talk covers the Micius satellite's landmark achievements — QKD between China and Austria, teleportation from Earth to orbit, and entanglement distribution over 1,000 km — as well as the CubeSat approach to making space quantum communications more accessible, and the vision for a Space Quantum Internet distributing entanglement globally.

Venue

East-Audrey Wood Room, Physics Department

Week 4

Alexandra E. Moylett (Nu Quantum)

Distributed Quantum Computing: Scaling Out to Scale Up

About the Speaker

Alexandra E. Moylett (they/she) is the Quantum Error Correction Group Lead at Nu Quantum, a Cambridge-based company working on distributed quantum computing. Their research explores how to implement quantum error-correcting codes in a distributed setting, with a particular interest in dynamic codes and logical gates. Prior to joining Nu Quantum, Alex was a Quantum Scientist at Riverlane, where they worked on quantum algorithms and quantum error correction. They hold a PhD in Physics and an MEng in Computer Science, both from the University of Bristol.

Abstract

Quantum computing is set to offer significant benefits for a wide variety of problems — but managing the errors that quantum computers experience introduces significant overheads. In this talk, Alex will explain how distributed quantum computing can help tackle this challenge of scale, and share some of Nu Quantum's latest efforts in making it a reality.

Venue

Online via Zoom