Brune leads the Circular Rydberg Atom / Cavity QED group at LKB (Collège de France site), continuing the work of Serge Haroche (Nobel 2012). Note: Brune is employed by ENS, not Sorbonne Université; postdoc contracts are typically ENS/CNRS. Research directions: (1) Circular Rydberg atoms — atoms in extremely high principal quantum number states (n~50) with extremely long radiative lifetimes (~30 ms) and large dipole moments; (2) Cavity QED quantum sensing — single circular atoms probe the microwave field in a superconducting cavity photon-by-photon via quantum non-demolition measurement; (3) Quantum state engineering — generating Fock states, Schrödinger cat states, and entangled atom-field states in the cavity; (4) Tests of quantum complementarity — observing decoherence of mesoscopic superpositions in real time as a probe of quantum-to-classical transition. The 'quantum radio receiver' using single atoms to sense individual microwave photons is a landmark quantum sensing demonstration.
Michel Brune leads the Rydberg atoms / cavity QED group at LKB. Research: (1) circular Rydberg atoms trapped in high-finesse microwave cavities — quantum non-demolition measurement of photons, quantum state engineering; (2) fundamental quantum optics: decoherence, entanglement, quantum jumps, Schrödinger cat states; (3) quantum sensing of cavity fields with single atoms as probes. This group pioneered cavity QED experiments leading to the 2012 Nobel Prize (Haroche). Brune heads the laboratory.
Dotsenko is a permanent member of LKB's Rydberg-atom cavity-QED team (successor to Haroche/Brune's circular-Rydberg-atom programme), using long-lived circular Rydberg states strongly coupled to microwave photons in high-Q cavities for quantum non-demolition measurement, entanglement generation, and microwave-photon-number quantum sensing.
Gleyzes is a CNRS researcher in the Rydberg Atoms team at LKB (successor to Serge Haroche's cavity-QED group), where he achieved the first quantum non-demolition detection of a single microwave photon. The team now prepares non-classical states of circular Rydberg atoms as probes for electric- and magnetic-field sensing below the standard quantum limit, uses quantum optimal control to navigate large Rydberg Hilbert spaces, and has demonstrated millisecond-lived circular states at room temperature, a route toward practical Rydberg-atom quantum sensors and simulators.
Sayrin works on circular Rydberg-atom cavity QED at LKB, developing microwave-photon quantum-non-demolition detection and feedback-based quantum control protocols that build on the cavity-QED foundations pioneered by Haroche and Brune's team.