Buechler leads quantum many-body theory at ITP III: strongly interacting quantum systems, quantum optics, and the theory of cold atomic and molecular gases -- in particular Rydberg systems, where he has been a central theorist for interaction-engineered tweezer arrays, dressed interactions and photon-photon interactions in Rydberg media. He is the theory counterpart to Pfau's and Wrachtrup's experiments in the same department. Relative to the established NV-ensemble quantum-sensing playbook (DEER, nanoscale NMR, T1 relaxometry at pT/sqrt(Hz) ensemble sensitivity), a theory-first inclusion: the relevant output is the protocol layer -- how to engineer Hamiltonians in interacting spin/Rydberg ensembles so that entanglement or dressing improves sensitivity beyond the standard quantum limit, which is exactly the theory an NV-ensemble sensing programme needs and rarely has in-house.
Assembles optical-tweezer-trapped arrays of ultracold atoms and polar molecules (including NaRb) for quantum information science, quantum simulation, and cluster-state quantum computing, with associated Rydberg-based sensing capabilities.
Levine builds neutral-atom tweezer-array and superconducting-qubit platforms for quantum computing, quantum error correction, and quantum sensing, aiming to combine the programmability of Rydberg arrays with new approaches to distributed and networked quantum sensing. The group is actively recruiting postdocs.