Edmonton Journal

Quanta helps physicists hone business skills

Alberta holds potential for becoming quantum nanotechno­logy research hub

- JURIS GRANEY jgraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/jurisgrane­y

Physicists at the University of Alberta are hoping to emulate the success of their artificial intelligen­ce studying counterpar­ts in establishi­ng the city and the province as the nucleus of quantum nanotechno­logy research in Canada and North America.

Google’s artificial intelligen­ce research division DeepMind announced in July it had chosen Edmonton as its first internatio­nal AI research lab, based on a longrunnin­g partnershi­p with the U of A’s 10-person AI lab.

Retaining the brightest minds in the AI and machine-learning fields while enticing a global tech leader to Alberta was heralded as a coup for the province and the university.

It is something U of A physics professor John Davis believes the university’s new graduate program, Quanta, can help achieve in the world of quantum nanotechno­logy.

The graduate program is geared toward developing soft skills in entreprene­urship and understand­ing business skills like how to start a company or protect and market their intellectu­al property.

“Physicists are good at doing science, but we are generally scared of doing business,” he said.

Twenty-five students are currently enrolled in the program, but that could double next fall. The program is a collaborat­ion between the U of A and University of Calgary.

The field of quantum mechanics had long been a realm of theoretica­l science based on the theory that atomic and subatomic material like photons or electrons behave both as particles and waves.

“When you get right down to it, everything has both behaviours (particle and wave) and we can pick and choose certain scenarios which one of those properties we want to use,” he said.

But, Davis said, physicists and scientists are “now at the point where we understand quantum physics and are developing quantum technology to take to the marketplac­e.”

“Quantum computing used to be realm of science fiction, but now we’ve figured it out, it’s now a matter of engineerin­g,” he said.

And because of the very nature of the quantum world, each discovery that is made will require the developmen­t and creation of little pieces of hardware that must be designed by the rules of quantum mechanics.

Quantum computing labs are being bought by large tech companies such as Google, IBM and Microsoft because they realize they are only a few years away from having this power, he said.

Those making the groundbrea­king

We don’t want to build them up and ship them off to Silicon Valley. We want to train these people and get them to stay.

developmen­ts may want to commercial­ize their finds and take the technology to market and that is where Quanta comes in.

“We are trying to push science forward, push technology forward and then enable these amazing, highly trained, highly educated people to stay in Alberta,” he said.

“We don’t want to build them up and ship them off to Silicon Valley.

“We want to train these people and get them to stay here, build businesses here and build our economy.”

 ?? JOHN ULAN ?? U of A professor John Davis, left, says physicists “are generally scared of doing business.”
JOHN ULAN U of A professor John Davis, left, says physicists “are generally scared of doing business.”

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