PIs

Department(s)/lab(s): Materials Science and Engineering | M. Scott Electron Microscopy Lab @ UCB
Summary:

Scott uses and develops 4D-STEM (scanning nanobeam electron diffraction) and other advanced electron-microscopy modalities, including energy-filtered techniques, to map short-range structural order and local diffraction signatures in quantum and semiconductor materials at the nanoscale.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics & Astronomy | Scully Group / Institute for Quantum Science and Engineering @ TAMU
Summary:

Scully directs IQSE and pursues foundational quantum optics: quantum coherence effects (lasing without inversion, electromagnetically induced transparency), collective/superradiant emission, quantum-enhanced spectroscopy, and coherent-Raman schemes (FAST CARS) for real-time detection of pathogens and molecular fingerprints. In the broader landscape of NV-centre ensemble quantum sensing (DEER, nano-NMR, T1 relaxometry) operating near pT/sqrt(Hz) sensitivity, this work sits on the fundamental-light side, providing coherence and superradiance concepts that inform quantum-enhanced magnetometry read-out.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Seager Group (Exoplanets and Habitability) @ MIT
Summary:

NON-PREFERRED (astronomy pivot, kept for review). Seager's group works on exoplanet atmosphere and interior characterization and the search for atmospheric biosignature gases, including leadership of space-mission concepts (Starshade, ASTERIA, TESS deputy science direction) that require high-contrast, high-resolution spectroscopic instrumentation; per public reporting she is departing MIT for the University of Toronto/CITA effective September 1, 2026, so any postdoc search should confirm her host institution directly.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Selvin Lab @ UIUC
Summary:

Develops and applies single-molecule fluorescence super-resolution imaging (including FIONA, nanometer-accuracy localization) to study the structure and dynamics of molecular motors (myosins, kinesins, dyneins) and other biological macromolecules.

Department(s)/lab(s): Applied Physics | Semeghini Lab @ Harvard
Summary:

Semeghini is an experimentalist studying quantum simulation of complex materials using Rydberg-atom tweezer arrays; she joined the SEAS Applied Physics faculty after a postdoctoral appointment in Mikhail Lukin's group. Included as a borderline, not-preferred case: the Rydberg-tweezer platform overlaps with quantum-sensing hardware, though her stated focus is quantum simulation rather than sensing per se.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics / C2N (Centre de Nanosciences et Nanotechnologies) | Quantum Photonics Group (Senellart Lab, C2N) @ Paris-Saclay
Summary:

Pascale Senellart's group at C2N develops the world's most efficient and bright quantum dot single-photon sources. Research: (1) high-efficiency single-photon emitters based on semiconductor quantum dots in micropillar cavities β€” up to 99% efficiency, >98% photon purity; (2) entangled photon pair sources; (3) photonic integrated circuits for quantum information and sensing. Coordinator of Quantum-Saclay ecosystem; co-founder of Quandela (quantum photonics spinoff). Key for quantum sensing with non-classical light.

Department(s)/lab(s): Engineering | Institut Fresnel - Computational & Super-Resolution Imaging Team @ CNRS
Summary:

Sentenac develops computational super-resolution fluorescence microscopy at Institut Fresnel, notably Random Illumination Microscopy (RIM), which reconstructs sub-diffraction images from the statistics (variance) of many speckle-illuminated acquisitions without requiring photoswitchable probes, along with the underlying inverse-problem theory that establishes its resolution limits and robustness for live and thick-sample imaging.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Shaevitz Lab @ Princeton
Summary:

Shaevitz combines custom super-resolution and multifocal/3D imaging instrumentation with single-molecule tracking to make precision measurements of bacterial cell-shape mechanics, cytoskeletal dynamics (e.g. MreB), collective motility and pattern formation, and animal behavior quantification. His lab pioneered 3D live-cell imaging of bacterial shape during growth and continues to develop chromatic multifocal and localization-microscopy instrumentation in collaboration with the Yang and Gregor labs.

Department(s)/lab(s): Electrical and Computer Engineering | Shahriar Research Group @ Northwestern
Summary:

Prof. Shahriar's group uses atomic and optical systems for precision measurement and quantum information. Key directions: (1) White-light cavities β€” using anomalous dispersion media inside optical cavities to create a bandwidth-extended cavity enabling broadband gravitational wave detector sensitivity enhancement beyond current LIGO designs; (2) Superluminal (fast-light) gyroscopes β€” anomalous-dispersion-enhanced ring-laser gyroscopes for measuring the Lense-Thirring frame-dragging effect as a test of general relativity, with >10⁢× sensitivity enhancement over conventional Sagnac gyroscopes; (3) Quantum memories and computers using trapped atomic ensembles (PRISM protocol); (4) Ultra-low-light nonlinear optics with nanofibers and atoms for optical switching and quantum logic; (5) Holographic and polarimetric image processing. Member of LIGO Scientific Collaboration; contributed to GW170817 binary neutron star merger discovery. AT&T Professor of ECE.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemical Engineering | Shapiro Lab @ Caltech
Summary:

Shapiro's group creates genetically encoded reporters and actuators for ultrasound and MRI - notably gas-vesicle acoustic proteins - and technologies for sonogenetic and magnetogenetic control, enabling noninvasive, deep-tissue molecular imaging and cellular control of engineered cells and neural circuits. Actively recruiting. For context, this complements the established paradigm of NV-diamond ensemble magnetometry (Hahn-echo/DEER, nanoscale NMR, T1 relaxometry) operating near pT/√Hz sensitivity.