Research Areas - (443) Physics

Full path: Physics

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics – Institute for Quantum Electronics | Quantum Photonics Group (Imamoglu) @ ETH Zurich
Summary:

Imamoglu leads the Quantum Photonics Group at ETH, working at the intersection of quantum optics and condensed matter physics. Research directions: (1) Quantum emitters in 2D semiconductors β€” TMD monolayers (MoSe2, WSe2) host localized excitons that act as single-photon emitters; electrically tunable quantum dots in TMD heterostructures with high purity and spin-photon entanglement; developing them as quantum sensors of local electronic correlations at nanometer scales; (2) Strongly correlated electron physics β€” Mott insulator / Wigner crystal phases in moirΓ© TMD bilayers probed optically with single-photon resolution; mapping electronic phases with nanometer spatial resolution; (3) Polariton quantum fluids β€” exciton-polaritons in 2D semiconductor microcavities; (4) Quantum nonlinear optics β€” photon-photon interactions via giant Kerr nonlinearities in strongly coupled quantum dots. Quantum sensing angle: quantum emitters as nanoscale probes of correlated phases.

Tags:
Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (LKB) | Exotic Atoms / QED Tests Team @ ENS Paris
Summary:

Indelicato performs high-precision X-ray spectroscopy of highly-charged and exotic (muonic, antiprotonic, pionic) atoms at large-scale facilities to test bound-state quantum electrodynamics in the strong-field regime, complementing LKB's hydrogen/molecular-ion precision-spectroscopy programmes.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Irwin Lab @ Stanford
Summary:

Irwin invented the transition-edge sensor (TES) and pioneered SQUID-multiplexed readout now used throughout CMB and dark-matter detector arrays; his group builds quantum-limited electromagnetic sensors for axion dark matter searches (DMRadio) and cryogenic calorimeters, pushing sensitivity to the standard quantum limit and beyond -- a field of quantum sensing that, like ensemble NV-diamond magnetometry reaching pT/√Hz sensitivities, trades off bandwidth and volume for extreme field sensitivity.

Techniques:
Department(s)/lab(s): Electrical and Computer Engineering | Jacobberger Group @ UWMadison
Summary:

Develops scalable, atomically-precise low-dimensional (2D/1D/0D) materials and heterostructures, focusing on single-photon emitters and spin defects in semiconductors for quantum sensing and molecular-based qubits.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics and Astronomy | Jacobsen Research Group (X-ray Microscopy) @ Northwestern
Summary:

Prof. Jacobsen's group develops novel methods, instruments, and analysis approaches for X-ray nanoscale imaging and applies them to biology and environmental science, using the Advanced Photon Source (APS) at Argonne. Directions: (1) Scanning X-ray fluorescence microscopy (SXFM) for organ-wide and nanoscale elemental mapping of metals (zinc, copper, iron) in biological tissues β€” central to the NIH-funded QE-Map national resource; imaging how metals regulate cellular functions, synaptic zinc signaling, and neurodegenerative disease; (2) X-ray ptychography and coherent diffractive imaging (CDI) for nanoscale biological imaging beyond the diffraction limit with improved dose efficiency; (3) Development of new algorithms, optics (zone plates), and detector systems to push spatial resolution and dose efficiency in X-ray microscopy β€” including lensless imaging methods and compressed-sensing reconstruction. Joint appointment at Argonne National Laboratory (Argonne Distinguished Fellow); also involved in QE-Map resource with Kozorovitskiy and Hao Zhang (McCormick).

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (LKB) | Atom Chips Team @ ENS Paris
Summary:

Jacqmin works on chip-trapped ultracold-atom sources and matter-wave interferometry within LKB's Atom Chips team, part of the broader effort (alongside fiber Fabry-Perot microcavity work) to build compact, chip-scale atomic sensors and clocks.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | L2C - Nanoscale Imaging with NV Centers Team @ CNRS
Summary:

Jacques is a pioneer of scanning NV magnetometry, using single nitrogen-vacancy spins in scanning-probe diamond tips to image magnetic textures at the nanoscale under ambient conditions. His team applies this to condensed-matter systems including antiferromagnetic domain walls and chiral spin textures, non-collinear antiferromagnetic order via single-spin relaxometry, and current-driven skyrmion motion in synthetic antiferromagnets, work carried out in close collaboration with materials-physics groups.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Melbourne Ion Implantation and Single Ion Group (Jamieson) @ UMelb
Summary:

Jamieson's group built the counted single-ion implantation capability that underpins every donor spin qubit made at UNSW and Melbourne: individual P, Sb or Bi ions are implanted into silicon through a nanoscale aperture while on-chip detector electrodes register the electron-hole pairs from each ion stop event, so the number and position of dopants is known rather than assumed. Recent directions extend this to high-atomic-number donors for nuclear-spin qudits, to colour-centre creation in diamond and silicon carbide by counted implantation, and to characterising the damage and charge environment those ions leave behind. The work is fabrication-forward but its scientific content is single-particle detection metrology. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work β€” DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity β€” his contribution is upstream: the deterministic creation and validation of the very spin defects whose ensembles are later interrogated by DEER and nanoscale NMR at pT/sqrt(Hz).

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Ji Quantum Lab @ MIT
Summary:

PREFERRED. Ji is launching the Ji Quantum Lab at MIT to build next-generation scanning-probe and on-chip quantum sensors (millimeter-wave impedance microscopy, 'RFlexiScope') that map nanoscale conductivity, magnetism and collective excitations in strongly correlated and topological quantum materials down to the quantum limit. The lab is explicitly recruiting PhD students, postdocs, and UROPs as of its founding.

Department(s)/lab(s): PME | Jiang Group @ UChicago
Summary:

Quantum information theorist with strong focus on quantum sensing. Directions: (1) error-correction-enhanced quantum sensing protocols surpassing Heisenberg limit; (2) quantum transduction theory for microwave-optical interfaces; (3) global-scale quantum network architecture; (4) room-temperature NV-based nanoscale magnetometry theory; (5) sub-wavelength quantum imaging protocols. Works closely with experimental quantum sensing groups at UChicago and beyond.