Quantum Physics | Department of Physics – Yale University

Posted: January 22, 2023 at 12:38 am

Yoram AlhassidFrederick Phineas Rose Professor of PhysicsSPL 50yoram.alhassid@yale.edu203-432-6922Research Website Theorist

Current Projects:

The nuclear many-body problem;Femtoscience and nanoscience: nuclei quantum dots and nanoparticles;Cold atomic Fermi gases

Current Projects:

Quadratic Echo Line-Narrowing, Imaging Hard and Soft Solids, Advancing Spectral Reconstruction with Undersampled Data Sets, Custom NMR/MRI Probe Design and Construction

Current Projects:

Ultracold atomic physics in optical lattices

Current Projects:

Optomechanics: Radiation Pressure - Radiation pressure in the quantum engine, Optical control of microstructures, Mechanical control of nonclassical light and Persistent Current - Microcantilevers and probes of closed mesoscopic systems, In-situ electron thermometry, Persistent currents in normal-metal rings

Current Projects:

Haloscope At Yale Sensitive to Axion CDM (HAYSTAC), Electric dipole moment, Casimir effect

Current Projects:

Cryogenic Underground Observatory for Rare Events (CUORE), IceCube Neutrino Obervatory, CUORE Upgrade with Particle IDentification (CUPID), ATLAS, COSINE-100, DM-Ice, Haloscope At Yale Sensitive To Axion CDM (HAYSTAC)

Current Projects:

Quantum error correction when the noise is biased, Scalable fault-tolerant quantum error correction with bosonic qubits

Current Projects:

Exciton Transport & Diffusion; Time-Dependent Phenomena; Heterojunctions, Interfaces and Substrates; Defects

Current Projects:

The study of problems at the interface of optical and condensed matter physics

Current Projects:

Quantum transport phenomena in disordered media, mesoscopic electron physics, non-linear and chaotic dynamics, quantum and wave chaos, quantum measurement and quantum computing. Laser physics, non-linear optics, microcavity and random lasers.

Current Projects:

Quantum transductionfrom microwave to optical photons,Quantum networksand quantum communications,Superconducting quantum detectors

See the rest here:

Quantum Physics | Department of Physics - Yale University

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