School of Computational & Integrative Sciences
&
School of Physical Sciences
a seminar on
Analog Supercomputers : From Quantum Atom to Living Body
by
Professor Rahul Sarpeshkar
Dartmouth College, USA
Date: 01 August, 2018
Time: 4:00 PM, Wednesday
Venue: Seminar Room, SPS
Professor Rahul Sarpeshkar is currently the Thomas E. Kurtz Professor at Dartmouth College and a Professor of Engineering, Microbiology and Immunology, Physics, and Physiology and Neurobiology. His longstanding and frequent work in analog and biological computation, his book, Ultra Low Power Bioelectronics: Fundamentals, Biomedical Applications, and Bio-inspired Systems, and his most recent publications have pioneered the pioneered the field of Analog Synthetic Biology.
Abstract: The talk will illustrate how analog computation can take us back to the future and help us create powerful supercomputers on VLSI chips that shift us from the current digital paradigm to a significantly more powerful analog paradigm used by nature, in quantum physics, chemistry, and biology. We can then apply such supercomputers to solving intractable problems such as 'Bio Googling' medical cures for intractable diseases or for creating revolutionary quantum-inspired and bio-inspired algorithms and architectures that have not been imagined before. These include a 'quantum cochlea', a spectrum analyzer inspired by how the human ear works, but based on quantum rather than classical analog circuits.