People

Simone Montangero

Full Professor

e-mail: simone.montangero[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 310 (via Loredan 10)

About

Simone Montangero is Full Professor at University of Padua where he directs the Quantum Computing and Simulation Center. He is Honorary Professor at Ulm University and co-leads the Quantum Computing Spoke of the Italian National Center for HPC, Big-Data and Quantum Computer. He has been a Heisenberg Fellow of the German Science Foundation, a Humboldt Fellow, and a IQOQI visiting fellow of the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information of the Austrian Academy of Science. He is  a member of the Quantum Coordination Board of the Quantum Flagship and of the Research Council of the  National Metrology Institute of Italy – INRIM.
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Luca Salasnich

Full Professor

e-mail: luca.salasnich[at]pd.infn.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 338 (via Marzolo 8)

About

Luca is Full Professor of Condensed Matter Theory. His main scientific interests are macroscopic quantum phenomena. In particular, Bose-Einstein condensation and superfluidity with ultracold atoms, superconductivity, the Josephson junctions. He teaches Quantum Physics (BSc in Materials Science), Structure of Matter (MSc in Physics), and Quantum Physics with Atoms and Ions (PhD in Physics).

Luca Dell’Anna

Associate Professor

e-mail: luca.dellanna[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 108 (via Marzolo 8)

About

Luca Dell’Anna is Associate Professor at University of Padua in Condensed Matter Theory.
He graduated at the University of Trieste and obtained his PhD degree at the International  School for Advanced Studies, SISSA, Trieste in 2002. He carried out his research activity at the University La Sapienza of Rome, at the Max-Planck Institut für Festköperforshung in Stuttgart and at the Institute of Theoretical Physics at the University of Düsseldorf.
His main research interests are related to many-body quantum states of matter, topological states, long-range systems and out-of-equilibrium phenomena.

Marco Di Liberto

Assistant Professor

e-mail: marco.diliberto[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 314 (via Loredan 10)
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About

Marco Di Liberto is Assistant Professor at the University of Padua and currently leader of the “Rita Levi Montalcini” project on topological states of matter with quantum engineered systems.

He graduated at the University of Catania in 2011 and was a fellow of the Scuola Superiore di Catania (2005-2010).

He obtained his PhD from Utrecht University (The Netherlands) in 2015.

Then continued his research activity as a postdoctoral fellow at the BEC Center in Trento (2015-2017), Université Libre de Bruxelles (2017-2020) and Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information (IQOQI) in Innsbruck (2020-2022).

His main research interests are quantum simulation of many-body states of matter with atomic and photonic devices, topological states and out-of-equilibrium driven systems.

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Pietro Silvi

Assistant Professor

e-mail: pietro.silvi[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 316 (via Loredan 10)

About

Pietro Silvi is a faculty researcher in quantum information and correlated quantum matter.

He graduated at the university of Pisa and the school of excellence Scuola Normale Superiore in 2007, then achieved his PhD degree at SISSA/ISAS Trieste in 2011.

In his academic career, Dr. Silvi was Coordinator and/or PI of various national (Germany, Austria) and international (EU) project grants.

He’s one of the most prominent promoters of Tensor Network methods for Lattice Gauge Theories, as means to reach our full understanding of the Standard Model.

Ilaria Siloi

Assistant Professor

e-mail: ilaria.siloi[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 316 (via Loredan 10)

About

Ilaria Siloi is a faculty researcher in quantum computing and information.

She graduated from the Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia in 2010 and received her PhD in 2014, with a thesis on quantum correlations in molecular nanomagnets. Later, she continued as a post-doctoral associate in Italy and Finland for two years.

Her interest in solid-state physics and real materials took her to learn ab initio methodologies at the University of North Texas (AFLOW consortium) (2017-2019). Then, she joined the University of Southern California (2019-2022) where she worked on quantum chemistry and materials science problems on commercial quantum annealers.

Her main research interests are quantum simulation, quantum annealing, and optimization problems of practical relevance to be implemented on the current quantum devices.

Carmelo Mordini

Assistant Professor

e-mail: carmelo.mordini[at]unipd.it
location: Department of Physics and Astronomy, room 329 (via Loredan 10)

About

Carmelo Mordini is a faculty researcher in experimental quantum computing and simulation with trapped ions.

He graduated in 2015 from the University of Pisa and from the excellence institution of Scuola Normale Superiore.
He achieved his PhD in Physics at the University of Trento in 2019 in experimental atomic physics, with a thesis on the measurement of the thermodynamic properties of weakly interacting Bose-Einstein condensates and numerous other works on the dynamics and excitations of Bose gases.

In 2021 he moved to the field of trapped ions at ETH Zurich, specializing in trapping and control of individual ions with applications in quantum computing and simulation. His lead areas of expertise are the interface between ion traps and integrated photonics, and optimization and control of transport of ion crystals in different types of traps for use in quantum computing architectures.

Starting in 2024, he is the head of the new experimental branch of the Quantum group at UniPD, leading the realization of a new laboratory dedicated to quantum computing with trapped ions.

 

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