Institutions


Sydney, New South Wales 2006
Australia

Summary: Go8 research university whose physical sciences are concentrated in the Sydney Nanoscience Hub, which houses low-vibration/low-EMI basement labs, a class-100 cleanroom and the Research and Prototype Foundry (ANFF NSW node). Quantum at Sydney runs five experimental/theory laboratories: trapped-ion quantum control and precision metrology (Biercuk, Tan, Wolf; Q-CTRL spun out of this group), semiconductor quantum nanoscience and cryo-CMOS (Reilly, long tied to Microsoft Quantum), superconducting circuits (Croot), and rare-earth solid-state quantum integration (Bartholomew). The Institute of Photonics and Optical Science adds Brillouin optomechanics and microwave-photonic sensing (Eggleton, Merklein) and a THz/nanophotonics group (Kuhlmey, de Sterke, Palomba, Fleming). The Sydney Institute for Astronomy is the world centre of gravity for astrophotonics (Bland-Hawthorn, Leon-Saval, Tuthill, Bryant; SAIL/Astralis), an unusually clean pivot for a quantum-sensing physicist into photon-starved, resolution-limited instrumentation.

Notes:

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Quantum Control Laboratory @ USyd
Summary:

Tan trained at NIST Boulder in the Wineland lineage and brought quantum-logic spectroscopy and entanglement-enhanced metrology to Sydney. His independent programme builds trapped-ion systems for quantum simulation of vibronic and chemical dynamics, for bosonic/qudit encodings, and — most relevant here — for precision measurement that exploits entangled states to beat the standard quantum limit. The group also works on high-fidelity gates and on using motional modes as sensitive transducers of weak forces and electric fields. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — entanglement-enhanced protocols are the natural next step beyond the shot-noise-limited pT/sqrt(Hz) ensemble measurements that define the current NV state of the art, and Tan is one of a small number of Australian PIs actually implementing them. Mid-career, actively building; a strong option for a candidate wanting to move from spin ensembles to entangled sensors.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics / Sydney Institute for Astronomy | Tuthill High Angular Resolution Group @ USyd
Summary:

Tuthill is the world's leading practitioner of aperture-masking interferometry and its modern photonic successors. His group's instruments — GLINT (a photonic nuller that destructively interferes starlight on a chip), Dragonfly, and the kernel-phase analysis framework — exist to recover structure at and below the formal diffraction limit of the telescope, in the photon-starved, speckle-dominated regime where naive imaging fails. Science targets are the dusty pinwheel nebulae of Wolf-Rayet binaries, protoplanetary discs and direct detection of exoplanets. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — this is the astronomy entry in the search that most closely mirrors the intellectual structure of quantum sensing: the instrument's performance is set by a fundamental noise floor (photon and speckle noise, analogous to the shot-noise floor at pT/sqrt(Hz)), and the entire game is designing an estimator and a hardware front end that saturate it. Preferred attribute strongly present.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics / School of Chemistry | Wickham DNA Nanotechnology Group @ USyd
Summary:

Wickham builds DNA origami nanostructures — programmable, self-assembling scaffolds with nanometre-precision addressability — and uses them as molecular machines, drug-delivery vehicles and, most relevantly, as rulers and probes for single-molecule measurement. DNA origami is the standard platform for DNA-PAINT super-resolution and for positioning fluorophores, nanoparticles or spin labels at defined separations, and her group works on dynamic, reconfigurable devices that respond to biological triggers. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — DNA origami is the leading candidate technology for positioning target molecules at a controlled standoff from a near-surface NV ensemble, which is the central geometric problem in pushing NV nanoscale NMR and DEER from pT/sqrt(Hz) ensembles down to single-molecule sensitivity. Genuinely complementary skill set for a quantum-sensing candidate.

Department(s)/lab(s): School of Physics | Quantum Control Laboratory @ USyd
Summary:

Wolf works on trapped-ion quantum sensing, using the motional degrees of freedom of single ions and small crystals as transducers for weak electric fields and forces, together with non-classical motional states (squeezed and Fock states) to enhance the achievable sensitivity. The broader agenda is to use trapped ions as a testbed for fundamental measurement limits — quantum-enhanced amplification of small displacements, quantum non-demolition readout of motion — with an eye to applications in electric-field metrology and searches for new physics. Positioned against the established body of NV-ensemble quantum sensing work — DEER, nanoscale NMR and T1 relaxometry protocols operating at pT/sqrt(Hz) field sensitivity — trapped-ion motional sensing is the cleanest available platform for demonstrating the entanglement-enhanced scaling that NV ensembles at pT/sqrt(Hz) approach only in the shot-noise-limited regime. Early-career independent PI within the Quantum Control Laboratory; smaller group, higher autonomy.