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Story date:
Thursday,
May
13,
2004
The University of Calgary will soon have a prestigious new multidisciplinary program.
The
Quantum Information Sciences program is designed to host students of
math, physics, computer science, chemistry and electrical engineering.
The program has garnered international support and the University of
Calgary hopes that it will draw good students to Calgary.
"In
terms of international prestige, we're already there," said physics
professor and informatics Circle of Research Excellence member Dr.
Barry Sanders. "We're already gaining world news coverage."
The
U of C's academic plan outlines information technology as one of the 16
avenues through which they will pursue academic growth. The plan
acknowledges that the U of C is known for excellence in cryptography
and quantum computing.
"Calgary has had a long-standing strength in quantum information," confirmed Dr. Sanders.
The
program will draw talented graduate students from all over the world
looking to do research in advancing the quantum computing field. There
will be some undergraduate courses offered under the program as well
but, as Dr. Sanders points out, students in the program will require
expertise in one of the disciplines involved.
"The primary
target is graduate students," said Dr. Sanders, pointing out that even
they will have a hard time crossing disciplines from their degrees.
The program is gaining momentum quickly and is already well-rooted at the university.
"There's still a lot of building up going on," said Dr. Sanders. "By next year, we'll be moving in full swing."
-end of story-
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