Quantum mechanics is
              deterministic and probabilistic by nature, but until
              recently tools from stochastic processes are surprisingly
              underused in quantum mechanics. The situation has however
              rapidly changed in recent years. Experimental progresses
              in realizing stable and controllable quantum systems gave
              new impetus to study unexplored territory of quantum
              dynamics and it provides a unique opportunity to develop
              and test new mathematical ideas dealing with open quantum
              systems. New approaches rooted in probability theory have
              thus emerged. To quote but a few: quantum noise theory
              applied to out-of-equilibrium quantum dynamics, random
              matrix theory in quantum information theory, quantum
              trajectories and quantum stochastic differential equations
              applied to open and controllable quantum systems, quantum
              random walks and their use for quantum algorithms, etc.
              This remarkable blend of mathematical and physical ideas
              is at the root of the extraordinary efficiency that
              characterizes this scientific area. It is of growing
              practical importance and at the same time provides a vital
              source of fresh ideas and inspirations for those working
              in more abstract directions.
Our project aims at
              systematizing and developing the use of stochastic tools
              in modern quantum physics. Our team gathers mathematicians
              and theoretical physicists who played noticeable roles in
              recent advances in stochastic methods applied to quantum
              mechanics and to open quantum systems. We wish to develop
              synergies to tackle challenging problems of modern quantum
              physics using probabilistic approaches. 
            
          
Our objectives are centered
              on: 
(a) Quantum noises and open
              quantum systems; 
(b) Quantum trajectories; 
(c) Random states and random
              channels in quantum information theory; 
(d) Open quantum random
              walks. 
            
          
The following results are
              among our aims: 
-- We wish to obtain the
              very first rigorous results about out-of-equilibrium open
              quantum systems by a systematic use of quantum noises and
              repeated quantum interactions. As done in the past twenty
              years in classical statistical mechanics with classical
              Langevin equations, modeling effects of quantum heat baths
              by quantum Langevin equations should open the door for
              tractable mathematical models encoding quantum
              dissipation.
-- We want to develop what
              certainly constitutes one of the most original and
              powerful approach to recent conjectures in quantum
              information theory: the use of random matrices, free
              probability and operator algebraic tools. All the members
              of this project who are involved in quantum information
              theory are pioneers of this line of research and they did
              obtain important and recognized results. 
-- We want to develop the
              mathematical foundations of quantum trajectories as well
              as their domain of applications. Quantum trajectories are
              instrumental in analyzing fundamental physical experiments
              but, because of the difficult techniques from stochastic
              calculus and stochastic control theory they involve, they
              constitute important mathematical challenges.
-- We wish to adapt tools of
              strongly interacting quantum systems to deal with
              out-of-equilibrium mesoscopic systems. Cross-fertilization
              between those tools and quantum noise theory leads us to
              look for theoretical and mathematical formulations of
              out-of-equilibrium low dimensional quantum systems and
              their applications to control theory.
-- We want to develop the
              applications of open quantum random walks. Some of us have
              recently been involved in the emergence of a new promising
              kind of quantum random walks, called open quantum random
              walks, which take dissipation into account. We hope they
              provide powerful tools to obtain tractable models of
              out-of-equilibrium systems and we look forward to use them
              to define quantum analogue of exclusion processes.
              Deciphering their underlying (non-commutative) geometry is
              one of our more speculative objectives.