- Series
- Graph Theory Seminar
- Time
- Tuesday, April 21, 2026 - 3:30pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 005
- Speaker
- Nathan Claudet – University of Innsbruck – https://nathanclaudet.fr/
- Organizer
- Xiying Du and Rose McCarty
Quantum computing is concerned with harnessing the peculiar properties of quantum mechanics, in order to perform information-processing tasks beyond the capabilities of classical computers. Graph states are a family of quantum states, the resources for quantum computers. Graph states exhibit complex forms of quantum entanglement, implying for example that a quantum computer based on graph states is as powerful as any other quantum computer. But, unlike general quantum states, graph states are very easy to describe thanks to their one-to-one correspondence with mathematical graphs. This correspondence implies that many tools from graph theory can be applied to problems in quantum computing.
This talk aims to provide a gentle introduction to graph states, directed toward graph theorists. I will discuss two main applications of graph states, quantum networks and measurement-based quantum computing, and relate these applications to well-known graph-theoretical concepts, in particular vertex-minors. Finally, I will discuss the problem of classifying graph states, and the recent progress achieved through the development of new graph-theoretical tools.