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  1. Hace 5 días · In Bonn, Peter Scholze is running a seminar on Real local Langlands as geometric Langlands on the twistor-P1. Update: One more item. Videos of talks from a conference on arithmetic geometry in honor of Helene Esnault at the IHES last week are now available.

  2. Hace 4 días · The current notation for quantum gates was developed by many of the founders of quantum information science including Adriano Barenco, Charles Bennett, Richard Cleve, David P. DiVincenzo, Norman Margolus, Peter Shor, Tycho Sleator, John A. Smolin, and Harald Weinfurter, building on notation introduced by Richard Feynman in 1986.

  3. Hace 4 días · Erdős himself has Erdős number zero. There are more than 11,000 people with an Erdős number of two. This is a partial list of authors with an Erdős number of three or less, including only those who have existing Wikipedia articles.

  4. Hace 5 días · A few items, all involving Peter Scholze in one way or another: A seminar in Bonn on Scholze’s geometrization of real local Langlands is finishing up next week. This is working out details of ideas that Scholze presented at the IAS Emmy Noether lectures back in March. Until recently video of those lectures was all that was available (see here ...

  5. Hace 3 días · Then, following Anders Björner, Laszlo Lovasz, and Peter Shor, I’ll explain how to place such results into the context of greedoid languages, which have interesting connections to matroids, Coxeter groups, and other much-studied mathematical objects.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bell_LabsBell Labs - Wikipedia

    Hace 3 días · Also in 1994, Peter Shor devised his quantum factorization algorithm. In 1996, SCALPEL electron lithography, which prints features atoms wide on microchips, was invented by Lloyd Harriott and his team. The operating system Inferno, an update of Plan 9, was created by Dennis Ritchie with others, using the then-new concurrent programming language ...

  7. Hace 2 días · Without error correction, thermal fluctuations and other sources of noise cause quantum systems to decohere and lose information. In 1995, however, Peter Shor and Andrew Steane discovered a method of quantum error correction that circumvents this problem.