ESP Biography



KEVIN ZHOU, Stanford PhD student in Physics




Major: Physics

College/Employer: Stanford

Year of Graduation: 2023

Picture of Kevin Zhou

Brief Biographical Sketch:

I'm a PhD student interested in particle physics, and physics education in general! For more, see my website at knzhou.github.io



Past Classes

  (Clicking a class title will bring you to the course's section of the corresponding course catalog)

C7549: Quantum Cryptography in Splash Fall 2019 (Nov. 16 - 17, 2019)
Earlier this year, Google's Quantum AI lab achieved "quantum supremacy", making a quantum computer that could solve a problem no classical computer reasonably could. This poses a future challenge for classical cryptography, because many forms of it only work as long as certain problems remain hard to solve. But just as quantum computers threaten classical cryptography, quantum mechanics itself offers a way out. In this class, we'll cover the basics of quantum cryptography, showing how one can send a message and have its secrecy guaranteed by the laws of physics themselves, against any adversary, classical or quantum.


C7551: How to Find a Particle in Splash Fall 2019 (Nov. 16 - 17, 2019)
CERN has found the Higgs boson, but nobody has ever seen one. The Higgs decays almost instantly, and its decay products are buried in the wreckage of a violent proton-proton collision. So how do we know there ever was a Higgs boson there at all? In this class, we'll talk about how the complex, noisy data of the LHC is turned into concrete results. We'll start with an overview of the LHC detectors, then describe how each fundamental particle leaves its own subtle mark on the data. At the end, you'll test your skills by identifying a few particles from real LHC data!