Le Jeannic works on heralded single-photon sources and atom-photon quantum-network interfaces at LKB, contributing to the hybrid quantum-network line led by Julien Laurat, with an emphasis on high-rate, high-fidelity photonic entanglement distribution.
Patrick Ledingham's Hybrid Quantum Networks Lab develops light-matter interfaces for large-scale quantum photonic networks. Research: (1) warm and cold atomic ensemble quantum memories (ORCA protocol in warm Rb vapour) for telecom-wavelength photon storage; (2) atom-photon entanglement generation; (3) multiplexed quantum memories for repeater nodes. Key for quantum sensing via atom-photon entanglement and quantum repeater architectures.
Peter Lodahl's Quantum Photonics Group develops deterministic photon-emitter interfaces using semiconductor quantum dots embedded in photonic nanostructures (nanowires, photonic crystal waveguides). Research targets: single-photon sources with near-unity efficiency and indistinguishability; spin-photon interfaces for quantum repeaters; integrated quantum photonic circuits; and quantum networks based on single emitters. The group leads the Hy-Q Centre for Hybrid Quantum Networks and holds several quantum technology patents and spin-out companies. Borderline case β primarily quantum photonics for networking but with quantum sensing applications (single photon sensing, spin-photon).
Works in quantum optics and AMO physics: generation, characterization, and engineering of photonic quantum states, atomic and solid-state quantum memories, single-photon-level atomic/molecular spectroscopy, and optical magnetometry for quantum sensing; leads UIUC's public quantum network project.
Lukin's group is a leading center for quantum science built on NV- and SiV-center diamond spin qubits, neutral-atom (Rydberg) tweezer arrays, and hybrid quantum networks, spanning quantum sensing, quantum information processing, and many-body physics. This work builds directly on the lineage of NV ensemble quantum sensing experiments (DEER, nanoscale NMR, T1 relaxometry) that first reached pT/βHz-class magnetic sensitivities, which Lukin's own group helped pioneer and continues to extend toward nuclear-spin-register-based nanoscale NMR and distributed sensor networks.
Lvovsky works broadly across quantum and optical technology, from foundational quantum optics (non-classical light states) to quantum-enhanced imaging; recent work combines spatial-mode demultiplexing with image scanning microscopy to push lateral resolution beyond the classical diffraction limit.
Mabuchi's group studies continuous quantum measurement and feedback in cavity-QED and photonic circuit platforms, developing the theory and hardware for real-time quantum-limited monitoring and control of light-matter systems, foundational to many quantum-sensing readout schemes.
Mahmoodian is a quantum-optics theorist working on waveguide QED and photon-photon interactions: how strongly-coupled emitters in a one-dimensional photonic channel generate non-classical photon-number correlations, and how those correlated multi-photon states can be exploited. His most sensing-relevant result is the demonstration that photon-number-correlated states produced by a single emitter can be used for quantum-enhanced metrology and absorption spectroscopy, beating the shot-noise limit with a source that requires no squeezing. He also works on the fundamental limits of quantum-enhanced measurement. 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 work belongs to the 'fundamental light physics' arm of the search rather than the spin arm, and it addresses the question directly downstream of pT/sqrt(Hz) ensembles: given a shot-noise-limited readout, what does non-classical light buy you? Theory PI, but tightly coupled to photonics experiments.
Main works on nonlinear dynamics, semiclassics and quantum chaos, and is the principal theorist behind Stuttgart's Rydberg-exciton programme: high-n excitons in cuprous oxide, where the giant excitonic Rydberg states show magnetoexciton spectra, level statistics and symmetry breaking that his group models quantitatively. This is the theoretical partner to Giessen's (existing PI) experimental Rydberg-exciton work. Relative to the established NV-ensemble quantum-sensing playbook (DEER, nanoscale NMR, T1 relaxometry at pT/sqrt(Hz) ensemble sensitivity), a borderline theory inclusion, kept because Rydberg excitons are a genuinely promising solid-state electrometry platform -- giant polarizability in a semiconductor rather than a vapour cell -- and this is the group that understands their spectra.
Malaney works on quantum communications with an emphasis on the satellite channel: continuous- and discrete-variable QKD through atmospheric turbulence, entanglement distribution from space, and the use of Gaussian and squeezed states as the carriers. A distinct thread is quantum-enhanced sensing and localisation β quantum illumination and quantum radar β where entangled probe states are used to detect weakly-reflecting targets in noisy backgrounds. 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 work belongs to the nonclassical-light arm of the search: it addresses whether squeezing and entanglement can be preserved through a lossy channel well enough to deliver a real metrological advantage, which is the practical question that determines whether quantum-enhanced sensing can ever beat a well-engineered shot-noise-limited pT/sqrt(Hz) device. Largely theory/simulation with some experimental collaboration.