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members:ncerf [2023/02/01 17:49]
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members:ncerf [2023/10/13 11:00]
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 Nicolas Cerf received a [[https://​ec.europa.eu/​commission/​presscorner/​detail/​en/​IP_06_1574|Marie Curie Excellence Award]] in 2006. He also had earned the Caltech President'​s Fund award in 1997, the Alcatel-Bell scientific prize in 1999, and the prize of the Wernaers fund awarded by the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS) in 2000. He was a member of the steering committee of the programme "​Quantum Information Theory and Quantum Computation"​ funded by the European Science Foundation (ESF), a member of the coordination action QUROPE (Quantum Information Processing and Communication in Europe), and a member of the network of excellence QUIPROCONE (Quantum Information Processing and Communications Network of Excellence). He is currently a member of the Advisory Board of the Coordination Action QUTE-EUROPE (Quantum Technologies for Europe). He is or has been involved in several European research projects under the 5th Framework Program, EQUIP (Entanglement in Quantum Information Processing and Communication),​ CHIC (Consortium for Hamiltonian Intramolecular Computing), and RESQ (Resources for Quantum Computation),​ as well as under the 6th Framework Program, SECOQC (Development of a Global Network for Secure Communication based on Quantum Cryptography),​ COVAQIAL (Continuous Variable Quantum Information with Atoms and Light), QAP (Qubit Applications),​ and under the 7th Framework Program, COMPAS (Computing with mesoscopic photonic and atomic states), HIPERCOM (High-performance coherent quantum communications),​ and QALGO (Quantum Algorithmics). Within Horizon 2020, he participates in project QUCHIP (Quantum simulation on a photonic chip). The project COVAQIAL, which he had coordinated during FP6, was selected as a nominee by the Grand Jury for the 2007 Descartes Prize for Transnational Collaborative Research. Nicolas Cerf received a [[https://​ec.europa.eu/​commission/​presscorner/​detail/​en/​IP_06_1574|Marie Curie Excellence Award]] in 2006. He also had earned the Caltech President'​s Fund award in 1997, the Alcatel-Bell scientific prize in 1999, and the prize of the Wernaers fund awarded by the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS) in 2000. He was a member of the steering committee of the programme "​Quantum Information Theory and Quantum Computation"​ funded by the European Science Foundation (ESF), a member of the coordination action QUROPE (Quantum Information Processing and Communication in Europe), and a member of the network of excellence QUIPROCONE (Quantum Information Processing and Communications Network of Excellence). He is currently a member of the Advisory Board of the Coordination Action QUTE-EUROPE (Quantum Technologies for Europe). He is or has been involved in several European research projects under the 5th Framework Program, EQUIP (Entanglement in Quantum Information Processing and Communication),​ CHIC (Consortium for Hamiltonian Intramolecular Computing), and RESQ (Resources for Quantum Computation),​ as well as under the 6th Framework Program, SECOQC (Development of a Global Network for Secure Communication based on Quantum Cryptography),​ COVAQIAL (Continuous Variable Quantum Information with Atoms and Light), QAP (Qubit Applications),​ and under the 7th Framework Program, COMPAS (Computing with mesoscopic photonic and atomic states), HIPERCOM (High-performance coherent quantum communications),​ and QALGO (Quantum Algorithmics). Within Horizon 2020, he participates in project QUCHIP (Quantum simulation on a photonic chip). The project COVAQIAL, which he had coordinated during FP6, was selected as a nominee by the Grand Jury for the 2007 Descartes Prize for Transnational Collaborative Research.
  
-Nicolas Cerf has been the PhD thesis advisor of Sofyan Iblisdir, Jérémie Roland, Gilles Van Assche, Louis-Philippe Lamoureux, Raul Garcia-Patron,​ Julien Niset, Loïck Magnin, Joachim Schäfer, Christos Gagatsos, Anaelle Hertz, Michael Jabbour, Zacharie Van Herstraeten, ​and Matthieu Arnhem. He also partly followed, although not in the advisor role, the PhD thesis of Stefano Pironio, Frédéric Grosshans, Anthony Leverrier, and Carlos Navarrete-Benlloch.  ​+Nicolas Cerf has been the PhD thesis advisor of Sofyan Iblisdir, Jérémie Roland, Gilles Van Assche, Louis-Philippe Lamoureux, Raul Garcia-Patron,​ Julien Niset, Loïck Magnin, Joachim Schäfer, Christos Gagatsos, Anaelle Hertz, Michael Jabbour, Zacharie Van Herstraeten,​ Matthieu Arnhem, Célia Griffet, and Benoît Seron. He also partly followed, although not in the advisor role, the PhD thesis of Stefano Pironio, Frédéric Grosshans, Anthony Leverrier, and Carlos Navarrete-Benlloch.  ​
  
 He currently heads the Centre for Quantum Information and Communication (QuIC). ​ He currently heads the Centre for Quantum Information and Communication (QuIC). ​