Nicoletta Carabba undertook her PhD studies at the University of Luxembourg in 2021-2024 under the supervision of Prof. Adolfo del Campo. She previously received bachelor's and master's degrees, both cum laude, at the University of Pisa. The subject of her master thesis was the study of U(1) axial condensates in the high temperature, chirally-restored phase of QCD, with the purpose of shedding light on a long-standing question: the fate of the U(1) axial symmetry above the chiral transition. The work, carried out under the supervision of Prof. Enrico Meggiolaro, resulted in a publication in Physical Review D. Motivated by a deep fascination with the quantum world, during her PhD, she investigated the nature of time in quantum mechanics aiming at assessing the fundamental timescales and the amount of complexity of the dynamics. Her research focused on the field of quantum speed limits (QSL) and operator growth.
Nicoletta also performed numerical studies during her research visits at the Donostia International Physics Center and the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Her PhD thesis is based on three publications. The first, published in Communications Physics, establishes a universal constraint to the growth of operator complexity and was recognized with the best theoretical poster award at the Bristol Quantum Information Technology Workshop of 2022. Two other papers, published in Quantum, generalize the notion of QSL to the evolution of operators.