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About

We are a theoretical research group working at the interface of quantum information science, condensed matter physics, and AMO (atomic, molecular, optical) physics. For more information about our specific research interests, please visit the Research page. For the latest updates, check out the News.

Postdoc and graduate student positions available: email av[group leader's last name]@gmail.com

Group Lead

headshot of Alexey Gorshkov

All Group Members

  • Adam Artymowicz
  • sharoon austin
  • a photograph of alexandra behne
  • Profile photo of Elizabeth Bennewitz
  • Lorcan Conlon
  • nathan constantinides
  • Profile photo of Ali Fahimniya
  • Profile photo of Chris Fechisin
  • yifan hong

    Yifan Hong

  • Emil
  • Profile photo of Zhenning Liu
  • Peter Lu standing
  • Profile photo of Connor Mooney
  • sean
  • Profile photo of Jeet Shah
  • Profile photo of Daniel Spencer
  • thomas steckmann
  • twesh
  • Yuxin
  • Zhiyuan
  • Jeffery Yu

Alumni

  • Profile photo of Christopher Baldwin
  • Profile photo of Ryan Belyansky
  • kishor
  • Profile photo of Jacob Bringewatt
  • A young man wearing a black shirt stands facing the camera with a white background.
  • Profile photo of Su-Kuan Chu
  • Ella
  • Profile photo of Dhruv Devulapalli
  • Profile photo of Adam Ehrenberg
  • Profile photo of Luis Pedro García-Pintos
  • Profile photo of Andrew Guo
  • Dominik
  • Profile photo of Simon Lieu
  • Profile photo of Cheng-Ju (Jacob) Lin
  • Profile photo of Pradeep Niroula
  • a photo of a man wearing a red shirt
  • Profile photo of Seth Whitsitt

Recent News

  • Stretched Photons Recover Lost Interference

    October 14, 2019

    The smallest pieces of nature—individual particles like electrons, for instance—are pretty much interchangeable. An electron is an electron is an electron, regardless of whether it’s stuck in a lab on Earth, bound to an atom in some chalky moon dust or shot out of an extragalactic black hole in a superheated jet. In practice, though, differences in energy, motion or location can make it easy to tell two electrons apart.One way to test for the similarity of particles like electrons is to bring them together at the same time and place and look for interference—a quantum effect that arises when particles (which can also behave like waves) meet. This interference is important for everything from fundamental tests of quantum physics to the speedy calculations of quantum computers, but creating it requires exquisite control over particles that are indistinguishable.With an eye toward easing these requirements, researchers at the Joint Quantum Institute (JQI) and the Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science (QuICS) have stretched out multiple photons—the quantum particles of light—and turned three distinct pulses into overlapping quantum waves. The work, which was published recently in the journal Physical Review Letters, restores the interference between photons and may eventually enable a demonstration of a particular kind of quantum supremacy—a clear speed advantage for computers that run on the rules of quantum physics.

Recent Publications