Rice University has taken the lead in influencing the global conversation on light-matter interaction as quantum technologies move from theoretical frameworks into useful, practical implementations. The Frontiers of Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics conference, a high-level gathering of the world’s leading specialists in the area, took place at the Rice Global Paris Center from April 13–17, 2026.
The Rice Center for Cavity QED (RCCQ), a Smalley-Curl Institute initiative, organized the five-day seminar. In keeping with Rice’s larger institutional aim to broadening its global research footprint and establishing itself as a key hub in the field of quantum physics, the event was planned to explore novel techniques to constructing and managing quantum systems.
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The Central Role of Cavity QED
Fundamentally, cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED) is the study of how light particles interact with atoms or molecules when they are trapped in minuscule, mirrored areas. These “cavities” are intended to improve and regulate these basic interactions, offering a degree of accuracy necessary for the upcoming technological advancement.
The topic is now a fundamental underpinning for a number of important industries:
- Quantum computing: supplying the control required for interactions between qubits.
- Quantum Sensing: Increasing the sensitivity of devices used to monitor physical characteristics at the atomic level is known as quantum sensing.
- Quantum communication: Making it possible for light-matter interfaces to securely transmit data.
Cavity engineering, the regulation of interactions and dissipation, cavity-enhanced phenomena in solids, and the use of quantum light for sensing and imaging were the four emerging fields of study that were the focus of the Paris workshop.
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A Field in Expansion
Cavity QED was previously only seen from the perspective of atomic physics. Nonetheless, a notable change toward interdisciplinary cooperation was brought to light at the Paris meeting. Rice’s Smalley-Curl Institute head Junichiro Kono said quantum photonics, condensed matter physics, and chemistry have expanded the field’s theories.
Researchers in chemistry, quantum photonics, condensed matter physics, and even quantum communication are now working on the same ideas, Kono said. This shows that similar approaches are linking different fields. The 63 invited speakers from Columbia University, ETH Zurich, Max Planck, and Politecnico di Milano demonstrated this transdisciplinary reach.
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Strategic Global Engagement
It was a symbolic and strategic choice to hold the meeting at the Rice Global Paris Center. As the location of groundbreaking atomic cavity QED experiments in the 1970s, Paris has great historical relevance for the field. Europe is still a major center for quantum research today, and the meeting was very accessible to top European research teams due to its Paris location.
The event promoted intimate, face-to-face interactions that are essential for long-term global cooperation by bringing American researchers to Europe. The Rice Global Paris Center was created especially to facilitate this kind of cross-disciplinary and cross-geographic communication.
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Training the Next Generation
The conference gave early-career scholars’ professional development top emphasis. Rice sent 13 graduate students to Paris through the NSF Research Traineeship program, with 10 specialized in cavity QED.
Alessandro Alabastri, director of the applied physics graduate program and RCCQ co-director, underlined that future scientists need international collaborative experience. These students met industry veterans through networking and a poster session.
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Institutional Legacy and Support
The conference builds on Rice University’s excellence. The Smalley-Curl Institute began at the 1979 Rice Quantum Institute founded by Nobel laureates Richard Smalley and Robert Curl.
The Wiess School of Natural Sciences, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Office of Research, and other Rice University departments helped the “Frontiers” conference succeed. Famous partners like the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, COMSOL Inc., attocube systems GmbH, Light Conversion Inc., and Cell Press helped.
Events like the Paris conference guarantee that Rice stays at the vanguard of the quantum revolution and drives the discoveries that will define the upcoming decades of science and technology as the university continues to forge long-term international relationships.
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