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Aram Harrow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aram W. Harrow
Born (1980-04-22) April 22, 1980 (age 45)
Alma materMIT
Known forHHL algorithm
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Doctoral advisorIsaac Chuang
Other academic advisorsNeil Gershenfeld
Websitewww.mit.edu/~aram

Aram Wettroth Harrow (born 1980) is an American quantum information scientist. He has been a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 2013.[1]

He was born on April 22, 1980 in Lansing, Michigan[2] to a family descended from Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe[3][4] and attended high school in East Lansing.[5] In 2001, he received an SB from MIT and completed an undergraduate thesis in the MIT Media Lab advised by Neil Gershenfeld.[6] In 2005, he received a PhD advised by MIT electrical engineering professor Isaac Chuang.

From 2005 to 2010 he was a lecturer at the University of Bristol, and from 2010 to 2012 he was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Washington.[1] He joined MIT in 2013.

In 2008, Harrow, Avinatan Hassidim, and Seth Lloyd introduced the HHL algorithm.[7] The algorithm was widely thought to give quantum machine learning algorithms with exponential speedups over the best classical algorithms, until the discovery by Ewin Tang of classical algorithms giving the same exponential speedups.[8]

He is on the steering committee of Quantum Information Processing (QIP), an annual quantum computing conference.[9] He is the creator and co-administrator of SciRate, a Reddit-inspired website for voting and commenting on papers which have been submitted to arXiv.[10]

His father was Kenneth W. Harrow, an English professor at Michigan State University known for his contributions to African literature.[3] He is married to Shefali Oza, an epidemiology researcher at Harvard.[3]

Selected publications

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  • Bremner, Michael J.; Dawson, Christopher M.; Dodd, Jennifer L.; Gilchrist, Alexei; Harrow, Aram W.; Mortimer, Duncan; Nielsen, Michael A.; Osborne, Tobias J. (November 25, 2002). "Practical Scheme for Quantum Computation with Any Two-Qubit Entangling Gate". Physical Review Letters. 89 (24): 247902. arXiv:quant-ph/0207072. Bibcode:2002PhRvL..89x7902B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.89.247902. PMID 12484981. S2CID 41875260.
  • Devetak, I.; Harrow, A. W.; Winter, A. J. (October 2008). "A Resource Framework for Quantum Shannon Theory". IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 54 (10): 4587–4618. arXiv:quant-ph/0512015. doi:10.1109/tit.2008.928980. ISSN 0018-9448. S2CID 17767728.
  • Barak, Boaz; Brandao, Fernando G. S. L.; Harrow, Aram W.; Kelner, Jonathan; Steurer, David; Zhou, Yuan (May 19, 2012). "Hypercontractivity, sum-of-squares proofs, and their applications". Proceedings of the forty-fourth annual ACM symposium on Theory of computing. ACM. pp. 307–326. arXiv:1205.4484. Bibcode:2012arXiv1205.4484B. doi:10.1145/2213977.2214006. ISBN 9781450312455. S2CID 937370.

References

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  1. ^ a b "Aram Harrow". www.mit.edu. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  2. ^ "Contributors" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. 49 (8). IEEE Information Theory Society: 2077–2080. August 2008.
  3. ^ a b c Harrow, Kenneth W. (2022). Space and Time in African Cinema and Cine-Scapes. p. x. ISBN 978-1-032-26570-4.
  4. ^ Saba, Alix (April 16, 2024). "Kenneth W. Harrow (1943-2024)". African Studies Association Portal - ASA.
  5. ^ "Physics honors students with awards". MIT News. June 6, 2001.
  6. ^ "Wayback Machine" (PDF). cba.mit.edu. October 28, 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 3, 2013.
  7. ^ Harrow, Aram W.; Hassidim, Avinatan; Lloyd, Seth (October 7, 2009). "Quantum Algorithm for Linear Systems of Equations". Physical Review Letters. 103 (15): 150502. arXiv:0811.3171. Bibcode:2009PhRvL.103o0502H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.103.150502. PMID 19905613. S2CID 5187993.
  8. ^ Tang, Ewin (2021). "Quantum Principal Component Analysis Only Achieves an Exponential Speedup Because of Its State Preparation Assumptions". Physical Review Letters. 127 (6): 060503. arXiv:1811.00414. Bibcode:2021PhRvL.127f0503T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.060503. PMID 34420330. S2CID 236956378.
  9. ^ "Home". qipconference.org. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  10. ^ "Top arXiv papers". SciRate. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
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