Theoretical computer scientist
John Harrison Watrous is the Technical Director of IBM Quantum Education at IBM and was a professor of computer science at the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science at the University of Waterloo , a member of the Institute for Quantum Computing , an affiliate member of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and a Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research .[ 1] [ 2] He was a faculty member in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Calgary from 2002 to 2006 where he held a Canada Research Chair in quantum computing .[ 1]
He is an editor of the journal Theory of Computing [ 3] and former editor for the journal Quantum Information & Computation .[ 4] His research interests include quantum information and quantum computation . He is well known for his work on quantum interactive proofs , and the quantum analogue of the celebrated result IP = PSPACE : QIP = PSPACE.[ 5] [ 6] [ 7] This was preceded by a series of results, showing QIP can be constrained to 3 messages,[ 8] QIP is contained in EXP ,[ 9] and the 2-message version of QIP is in PSPACE.[ 10] He has also published important papers on quantum finite automata [ 11] and quantum cellular automata .[ 12] With Scott Aaronson , he showed that certain forms of time travel can make quantum and classical computation equivalent: together, the authors showed that quantum effects do not offer advantages for computation if computers can send information to the past through a type of closed timelike curve proposed by the physicist David Deutsch .[ 13]
He obtained his Ph.D. in 1998 at the University of Wisconsin–Madison under the supervision of Eric Bach .[ 14] [ 15]
References
^ a b John Watrous Archived 2017-05-17 at the Wayback Machine at the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research website.
^ John Watrous Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine at the QuantumWorks website.
^ List of editors of Theory of Computing .
^ List of editors of Quantum Information & Computation .
^ Lance Fortnow (2009-07-29). "QIP = PSPACE" . Computational Complexity . Retrieved 2009-12-30 .
^ Dave Bacon (2009-07-28). "OMG QIP=PSPACE!" . The Quantum Pontiff . Archived from the original on 2010-01-05. Retrieved 2009-12-30 .
^ Rahul Jain; Zhengfeng Ji; Sarvagya Upadhyay; John Watrous (2009). "QIP = PSPACE". arXiv :0907.4737 [quant-ph ].
^ Watrous, John (2003). "PSPACE has constant-round quantum interactive proof systems" . Theor. Comput. Sci. 292 (3). Essex, UK: Elsevier Science Publishers Ltd.: 575– 588. doi :10.1016/S0304-3975(01)00375-9 . ISSN 0304-3975 .
^ Kitaev, Alexei; Watrous, John (2000). "Parallelization, amplification, and exponential time simulation of quantum interactive proof systems". STOC '00: Proceedings of the thirty-second annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing . ACM. pp. 608– 617. ISBN 978-1-58113-184-0 .
^ Rahul Jain; Sarvagya Upadhyay; John Watrous (2009). "Two-message quantum interactive proofs are in PSPACE". arXiv :0905.1300 [cs.CC ].
^ Kondacs, A.; Watrous, J. (1997). "On the power of quantum finite state automata". Proceedings of the 38th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science . pp. 66– 75.
^ Watrous, John (1995). "On one-dimensional quantum cellular automata". Proc. 36th Annual Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (Milwaukee, WI, 1995) . Los Alamitos, CA: IEEE Comput. Soc. Press. pp. 528– 537. doi :10.1109/SFCS.1995.492583 . ISBN 0-8186-7183-1 . MR 1619103 . .
^ Lisa Zyga (2008-11-20). "How Time-Traveling Could Affect Quantum Computing" . PhysOrg . Retrieved 2009-12-30 .
^ John Watrous at the Mathematics Genealogy Project .
^ John Watrous at the Institute for Quantum Computing directory.