QSE Quantum Seminar: "What cannot be learned in the quantum universe", Robert Huang

Event details
Date | 04.09.2025 |
Hour | 12:00 › 13:30 |
Speaker | Prof. Hsin-Yuan (Robert) Huang |
Location | |
Category | Conferences - Seminars |
Event Language | English |
Please join us for the QSE Center Quantum Seminar with Hsin-Yuan (Robert) Huang from Caltech and Google Quantum AI who will give the talk "What cannot be learned in the quantum universe" on Thursday September 4th from 12pm to 1:30pm
Location: MA B1 11
Pizzas will be available between the seminars at 12:00. All PhDs, postdocs, students, group leaders, and PIs are welcome to join us.
TITLE: "What cannot be learned in the quantum universe"
ABSTRACT:
Recent advances have enhanced our understanding of what can be efficiently learned in the quantum universe. However, certain fundamental aspects remain resistant to efficient learning using known algorithms. This talk explores several fundamental properties, including time, causal structure, topological order, noise, and demonstrates how they can be provably hard to learn. These results stem from our work on how to construct random unitaries (with Ma, arxiv:2410.10116) and generate them in extremely low depth (with Schuster and Haferkamp, arXiv:2407.07754). Examining these unlearnable aspects of our world sheds light on the fundamental limits of scientific inquiry in the quantum realm.
BIO:
Hsin-Yuan Huang (Robert) is an Assistant Professor of Theoretical Physics at Caltech and a Senior Research Scientist at Google Quantum AI. He completed his Ph.D. at Caltech under John Preskill and Thomas Vidick. His research leverages learning theory to advance quantum computation, physics, and information science, with contributions including classical shadow tomography, machine learning algorithms for quantum many-body problems, and quantum advantages in learning from experiments. His work has appeared in premier venues including Nature, Science, FOCS, and STOC, and has delivered over 160 invited talks. His doctoral thesis "Learning in the Quantum Universe" earned the Milton and Francis Clauser Doctoral Prize for the most original research among all 2024 Caltech graduates, and he holds additional honors including the Google Ph.D. Fellowship, Boeing Quantum Creator Prize, and the William H. Hurt Scholar endowed professorship.
Practical information
- General public
- Free