Mathematical Connections Seminar: Chinmay Nirkhe
March 5, 2026 4:15–5:30 p.m.
Location
Shanahan Center, 3481
320 E. Foothill Blvd.
Claremont, CA 91711
Contact
Melissa Hernandez-Alvarez
mhernandezalvarez@hmc.edu
Details
Why is Quantum Mechanics So Hard to Describe?: A Computational Lens on the Problem
Abstract
Why is quantum mechanics so hard to describe? In this talk, Chinmay Nirkhe will argue that this mystery can be explained through a computational lens. Nirkhe will introduce a perspective on quantum mechanics inspired by theoretical computer science and complexity theory, asking questions like: How hard is it to describe a quantum state? How hard is it for a (quantum) computer to certify properties of physical systems like local Hamiltonians? These questions naturally lead to QMA, the quantum analogue of NP (from complexity theory), where proofs themselves are quantum states and familiar ideas like verification and efficiency take on surprising new meanings.
Nirkhe will sketch recent research ideas (by him and the community) showing how quantum states can hide information in ways that defeat classical reasoning, how circuit depth and query complexity limit what we can learn about them, and what differentiates quantum proofs and states from their classical counterparts. The goal of this seminar is to invite thinking about quantum mechanics and physics from a new computational vantage point.
This event is for: faculty, staff, students
Community Connections events provide opportunities for HMC faculty, students and staff to cultivate community, foster open conversations and share important information as together we live out our mission and shape the future of the College.