Dr. Ivette Fuentes
Ivette
Fuentes,
Ph.D. is Research Fellow/Lecturer, Faculty of Science, The University of
Nottingham, UK.
Ivette earned her Ph.D. in 2003 from Imperial College, working
on quantum
optics and quantum information. Her postdoctoral experience includes a
fellowship at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, a
Glasstone Fellowship at the University of Oxford, and a Junior Research
Fellowship at Mansfield College. From 2006 to 2008 she was an assistant
professor at Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. From 2008 to 2009
she held a Humboldt Fellowship for Experienced Researchers at the
Technical
University of Berlin, Germany.
Ivette has worked on a number of topics within
theoretical physics, such as fundamental quantum mechanics, quantum
information, quantum optics, gravity, and astrophysics. Currently, she
studies how relativistic effects can be exploited for quantum
information theory, and how to construct exactly solvable models
describing multimode Bose-Einstein condensates.
Her papers include
Holonomic quantum computation in the presence of decoherence,
Continuous variable entanglement sharing in non-inertial
frames,
Entanglement in an expanding spacetime,
Correlation loss and multipartite entanglement across a
black hole horizon,
The Unruh effect in quantum information beyond the single-mode
approximation,
Entangling moving cavities in non-inertial frames,
Optimal Quantum Estimation of the Unruh-Hawking Effect,
Quantum accelerometer: distinguishing inertial Bob from his
accelerated
twin Rob by
a local measurement, and
Alice falls into a black hole: Entanglement in non-inertial
frames.
Watch
Interview with Ivette Fuentes, Nottingham, 7 May 2010.
Read her
LinkedIn profile.