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members:ncerf [2019/09/06 15:15]
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members:ncerf [2019/09/06 15:17]
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 Nicolas Cerf received a 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 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, and Michael Jabbour. He also has 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, and Michael Jabbour. 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). ​