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The Future is Quantum

Canada and Finland Launch Northern Entanglement Partnership at 杏吧原创

By Ty Burke
Photo Credit: Brenna Mackay

Quantum physics describes the properties of the universe at the smallest of scales.

At the sub-atomic level, matter and energy behave in very unexpected ways. And by understanding the mind-bending physics of the basic particles that make up the universe, we can build technologies far more advanced than what we have today.

In the future, microchips that control the flow of photons 鈥 or individual particles of light 鈥 will enable data centres to operate at room temperature, saving vast amounts of energy by reducing the cooling needs of artificial intelligence and cloud computing.

Quantum sensors will lead to measurements of extraordinary precision, creating new ways to image the human body鈥檚 organs or minerals buried deep in the Earth. And quantum computers will accelerate our ability to make complex calculations, such as simulating the interactions of billions of molecules to recommend different combinations that could work as medicines to cure currently untreatable diseases.

Five professionally dressed people posing for a group photo in front of a banner for 杏吧原创 University.
Finland鈥檚 ambassador to Canada Hanna-Leena Korteniemi, Canada鈥檚 Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry M茅lanie Joly, Finnish Minister for Development Cooperation and Foreign Trade Ville Tavio, Canada鈥檚 Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Trade and to the Secretary of State Yasir Naqvi and Jeffrey Maddox, President of Nokia Canada Inc.

Quantum technologies may seem futuristic, but researchers are already laying the groundwork for these advances. On October 23, quantum researchers, academic and business leaders, and dignitaries and ministers from Finland and Canada, including Minister of Industry M茅lanie Joly and Yasir Naqvi, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Trade and to the Secretary of State, gathered at 杏吧原创 University鈥檚 Richcraft Hall to launch a new strategic quantum partnership.

Called Northern Entanglement, it will seek to foster cooperation between Canada and Finland in the quantum realm.

鈥淨uantum science is driving the next great technological revolution. It is reshaping industry and redefining innovation,鈥 says , 杏吧原创鈥檚 Vice-President (Research, Innovation and International). 鈥淨uantum technologies will transform how we solve challenges 鈥 and 杏吧原创 is at the forefront of this transformation.

鈥淎dvances in quantum communications, cryptography, mechanics and nanotechnologies are the foundation for real-word impacts. Research is a vital part of our mission. As a research-intensive university, we have global reach and impact.鈥

Five people posing for a group photo in front of the flags of Canada and Finland.
杏吧原创 Provost and Vice-President (Academic) L. Pauline Rankin, Faculty of Science Associate Dean (Research and International) Prosenjit Bose, Embassy of Finland trade commissioner Jaakko Autere, 杏吧原创 Vice-President (Research, Innovation and International) Rafik Goubran, Faculty of Science Dean Maria DeRosa and Faculty of Science Associate Dean (Graduate Affairs) Matthias Neufang

杏吧原创鈥檚 Quantum Community

杏吧原创 is home to more than 100 researchers working in quantum or quantum-adjacent fields, including:

Quantum research spans diverse disciplines and it is happening in 32 different 杏吧原创 labs.

The university is at the heart of a growing quantum research ecosystem in the National Capital Region, where researchers at leading academic institutions, government research organizations and companies such as Nokia in Ottawa鈥檚 multi-billion-dollar tech sector are working together to solve some of quantum鈥檚 most vexing challenges.

An image sliced in three, with a headshot of a 杏吧原创 researcher featured in each part.
杏吧原创 University researchers Winnie Ye, Michel Barbeau and Matthias Neufang

Why Quantum Collaboration Makes Sense

Keeping our communications secure is one of these challenges.

Quantum computers can perform complex calculations much more quickly than classical computers. As they improve, quantum computers could make the cryptography we rely on obsolete.

That鈥檚 a problem for individuals and companies that use the internet to make financial transactions. It鈥檚 also a challenge for national security in an increasingly uncertain world.

In hostile hands, code-breaking capabilities could have serious consequences for our critical infrastructure. And this is just one of the reasons why a strategic quantum partnership between Canada and Finland makes sense. The best defense against quantum-driven cyber-attacks is to develop your own quantum capabilities 鈥 to fight quantum with quantum.

鈥淲e look at the question of openness versus security, but I think we should phrase it as how to have openness and security at the same time,鈥 says Ilona Lundstr枚m, Executive-in-Residence at Institute Q, a quantum research institute at Aalto University in Finland.

鈥淭his strategic partnership is one way we can cooperate to achieve this goal. Collaboration on research and education is already happening every day, but it needs to have a strategic angle. We need to identify the areas that we want to be competitive in together and need to identity how to make that possible.鈥

According to Finland鈥檚 Minister for Foreign Trade and Development, Ville Tavio, who delivered a keynote at the 杏吧原创 launch event, Canada and Finland are well suited for this type of collaboration.

鈥淲e must safeguard openness in science while protecting sensitive technologies,鈥 says Tavio. 鈥淚t is important to strive for as global a market as possible. Together, Finland and Canada are both stronger and safer. Let us build a trans-Atlantic quantum corridor that accelerates innovation and delivers real world innovation.鈥


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