American mathematician
Urmila Mahadev is an American mathematician and theoretical computer scientist known for her work in quantum computing and quantum cryptography .
Education and career
Mahadev is originally from Los Angeles, California, where her parents are physicians. She became interested in quantum computing through a course with Leonard Adleman at the University of Southern California ,[ 1] where she graduated in 2010.[ 2]
She went to the University of California, Berkeley for graduate study, supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship .[ 2]
As a student of Umesh Vazirani at Berkeley, Mahadev discovered interactive proof systems that could demonstrate with high certainty, to an observer using only classical computation, that a quantum computer has correctly performed a desired quantum-computing task.[ 1]
She completed her Ph.D. in 2018,[ 3] and after continued postdoctoral research at Berkeley,[ 1] she became an assistant professor of computing and mathematical sciences at the California Institute of Technology .[ 4]
Recognition
For her work on quantum verification , Mahadev won the Machtey Award at the Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science in 2018, and in 2021 one of the three inaugural Maryam Mirzakhani New Frontiers Prizes for early-career achievements by women mathematicians.[ 5] [ 6]
References
^ a b c Klarreich, Erica (October 8, 2018), "Graduate Student Solves Quantum Verification Problem: Urmila Mahadev spent eight years in graduate school solving one of the most basic questions in quantum computation: How do you know whether a quantum computer has done anything quantum at all?" , Quanta
^ a b Wall of Scholars , University of Southern California, retrieved 2020-09-19
^ Urmila Mahadev at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
^ Urmila Mahadev , California Institute of Technology, retrieved 2020-09-19
^ "Prizes" , FOCS 2018 , retrieved 2020-09-19
^ "Winners of the 2021 Breakthrough Prizes in life sciences, fundamental physics and mathematics announced" , Breakthrough Prizes , September 10, 2020, retrieved 2020-09-19