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RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS) is an international research center at RIKEN. It facilitates close collaborations among researchers from different disciplines in theoretical, mathematical and computational sciences. On April 1, 2025, iTHEMS transitioned from a program to a center. The ultimate goal of iTHEMS is to unravel the mystery of the Universe, matter, and life, as well as to solve key problems in modern society through interdisciplinary approaches.
Upcoming Events
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Seminar Tomorrow
Topological Image Analysis
December 25 (Thu) 12:00 - 13:00, 2025
Shizuo Kaji (Professor, Institute of Mathematics for Industry, Kyushu University)
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Seminar
Invitation to Random Tensor Models: from random geometry, enumeration of tensor invariants, to characteristic polynomials
January 6 (Tue) 13:30 - 14:30, 2026
Reiko Toriumi (Associate Professor, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST))
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Seminar
Higher Gauge Structures and Invariant Action Principles
January 6 (Tue) 15:15 - 16:15, 2026
Sebastián Salgado (External Researcher, Instituto de Alta Investigacion, Universidad de Tarapaca, Chile)
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Seminar
Median-based estimators for randomized quasi-Monte Carlo integration
January 9 (Fri) 15:00 - 17:00, 2026
Kosuke Suzuki (Associate Professor, Yamagata University)
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ColloquiumMeasuring evolutionary forces of cultural change
January 13 (Tue) 14:00 - 15:30, 2026
Joshua B. Plotkin (Walter H. and Leonore C. Annenberg Professor of the Natural Sciences, University of Pennsylvania, USA)
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Seminar
A one-world interpretation of quantum mechanics
January 16 (Fri) 14:00 - 16:00, 2026
Isaac Layton (Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Physics, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo)
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School
New computational methods in quantum field theory 2026
January 26 (Mon) - 28 (Wed) 2026
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Workshop
iTHEMS Cosmology Forum n°5 - Effective Field Theory approaches across the Universe
January 29 (Thu) 10:00 - 17:00, 2026
Katsuki Aoki (Research Assistant Professor, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto University)
Toshifumi Noumi (Associate Professor, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo)
Lucas Pinol (CNRS Researcher, LPENS, CNRS/École Normale Supérieure, France) -
OthersMathematical Application Research Team Meeting #12
February 6 (Fri) 14:00 - 15:30, 2026
Riccardo Muolo (Special Postdoctoral Researcher, Division of Fundamental Mathematical Science, RIKEN Center for Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS))
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SeminarWhat can we learn from kilonovae about nucleosynthesis and high-density matter?
February 9 (Mon) 14:00 - 15:15, 2026
Oliver Just (Postdoctoral Researcher, GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung, Germany)
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Seminar
Testing the quantum nature of gravity with optomechanical systems
February 26 (Thu) 10:00 - 12:00, 2026
Yuta Michimura (Assistant Professor, Department of Physics, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo)
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Workshop
RIKEN iTHEMS-Kyoto University joint workshop on Asymptotics in Astrophysics and Cosmology
March 2 (Mon) - 4 (Wed) 2026
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Workshop
KEK-iTHEMS Workshop “Concepts of Quantum and Spacetime”
March 9 (Mon) - 12 (Thu) 2026
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Workshop
Perspectives and applications of Koopman Operator Theory
March 19 (Thu) 9:00 - 18:00, 2026
Yoshihiko Susuki (Professor, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University)
Hiroya Nakao (Professor, Department of Systems and Control Engineering, Institute of Science Tokyo)
Alexandre Mauroy (Associate Professor, Mathematics, University of Namur, Belgium)
Yuzuru Kato (Associate Professor, Department of Complex and Intelligent Systems, School of Systems Information Science, Future University-Hakodate) -
Seminar
Clumpy Outflows from Super-Eddington Accreting Black Holes
April 10 (Fri) 14:00 - 15:15, 2026
Haojie Hu (JSPS Research Fellow, University of Tsukuba)
Opportunities
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Seeking Postdoctoral Researchers, a few positions (25-1527)
Deadline: Open until filled
Postdoctoral Researchers, a few positions. iTHEMS is seeking Postdoctoral Researchers to join the RIKEN–Berkeley Center as RIKEN–Berkeley Fellows, engaging in theoretical research in one or more of the following fields: quantum matter, quantum computation, quantum cosmology, and quantum mathematics.
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Seeking a few of Research Scientists or Postdoctoral Researchers (25-1477)
Deadline: Open until filled
Research Scientists or Postdoctoral Researchers, a few positions. The AI for Science Team is seeking researchers who, through fundamental research in AI centered on deep learning, will pioneer advanced AI technologies and explore new applications in the natural sciences.
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Seeking a Research Scientist or a Postdoctoral researcher (25-1440)
Deadline: Open until filled
Research Scientist or Postdoctoral Researcher : One position. The Prediction Science Research Team is seeking one Research Scientist or Postdoctoral Researcher to engage in research focused on developing a rapid prediction and control system for disaster prevention of heavy rainfall and urban flooding, based on big data assimilation techniques and integrating precipitation nowcasting, deep learning, and numerical weather prediction.
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Seeking a few Postdoctoral Researchers, Research Scientists or Senior Research Scientists (25-1262)
Deadline: Open until filled
Seeking a few Postdoctoral Researchers, Research Scientists or Senior Research Scientists to conduct research in the Quantum Mathematical Science Team, in collaboration (and, if necessary, jointly appointed) with cooperating laboratories.
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Seeking a Research Scientist, a Postdoctoral researcher or a Research Associate (25-1114)
Deadline: Open until filled
Research Scientist, Postdoctoral Researcher or Research Associate: one position. The Prediction Science Research Team, iTHEMS is seeking a Research Scientist, Postdoctoral Researcher, or Research Associate to engage in research on the mathematical foundations of a new “Science of Prediction,” integrating Simulation Science and Data Science to address large-scale, complex prediction and control challenges.
Latest News
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2025-12-23
Award
Hokuto Konno receives the 22nd (FY 2025) JSPS Prize
Hokuto Konno (Visiting Scientist, iTHEMS / Associate Professor, the University of Tokyo) received the 22nd (FY 2025) Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Prize on December 16, 2025. The JSPS Prize was established to recognize outstanding young researchers with exceptional creativity and research ability at an early stage of their careers, and to support their motivation and further development in research. Konno was highly commended for his series of research achievements entitled “Family Gauge Theory and Its Applications to Four-Dimensional Topology.” This work elucidates deep connections between gauge theory and low-dimensional topology, and represents an important contribution to the theoretical development of mathematics. The award ceremony is scheduled to be held on February 3, 2026, at the Japan Academy Auditorium. Congratulations, Hokuto!
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2025-12-18
Paper of the WeekWeek 3, December 2025
Title: Impact of experimental mass of $^{70}$Kr on the $^{68}$Se waiting-point in $rp$-process Author: Min Zhang, Yudong Luo, Akira Dohi, Xing Xu, Xinliang Yan, Toshitaka Kajino, Yuhu Zhang, Meng Wang arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.14145v1 Title: Schrödinger Symmetry in Spherically-symmetric Static Mini-superspaces with Matter Fields Author: Taishi Sano, Yuki Yokokura arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.13651v1 Title: Continuous Family of Conformal Field Theories and Exactly Marginal Operators Author: Shota Komatsu, Yuya Kusuki, Marco Meineri, Hirosi Ooguri arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.11045v1 Title: Bridging dS/CFT and Celestial Holography via Ward-Takahashi Identities Author: Hideo Furugori, Naoki Ogawa, Sotaro Sugishita, Takahiro Waki arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2512.10367v1 Title: Synchronization of Dirac-Bianconi driven oscillators Author: Riccardo Muolo, Iván León, Yuzuru Kato, Hiroya Nakao arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2506.20163v2
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2025-12-12
Hot Topic
Computing n-Time Correlation Functions without Ancilla Qubits
A research team led by Xiaoyang Wang (Postdoctoral Researcher, Quantum Mathematical Science Team, iTHEMS) has proposed a new method for computing n-time correlation functions, which play a central role in understanding the dynamics of quantum many-body systems. The proposed approach requires neither ancilla qubits nor controlled operations, and evaluates correlation functions using only the unitary time evolution of the system of interest. Conventional methods, such as the Hadamard test, rely on ancilla qubits that control the entire system, posing significant challenges for digital quantum processors with limited qubit connectivity and for analog quantum simulators where controlled operations are difficult or impossible to implement. The present work overcomes these limitations and broadens the range of quantum platforms on which multi-time correlation functions can be experimentally accessed. The protocol was demonstrated on IBM quantum hardware with up to 12 qubits, where the team successfully measured the single-particle spectrum of the Schwinger model and the out-of-time-order correlator (OTOC) in the transverse-field Ising model. In addition, an error-mitigation strategy based on signal processing—combining signal filtering and correlation analysis—was introduced, enabling the recovery of ideal noiseless simulation results from noisy experimental data. This work provides a new foundation for experimentally probing complex quantum many-body correlation functions under realistic hardware constraints, thereby strengthening the connection between theoretical predictions and quantum experiments.