Tags - (3) spin squeezing

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

Biercuk's Quantum Control Laboratory sits precisely at the intersection of control engineering and precision measurement. The group uses trapped ytterbium ions — including large 2D Penning-trap crystals — as both quantum simulators and as calibrated sensors, and is best known for noise spectroscopy: using the qubit itself as a spectrum analyser of its environment, then designing dynamical-decoupling and open-loop control sequences that null the dominant noise. That programme produced Q-CTRL, his quantum control software company, and more recently a serious push into quantum sensing for navigation (magnetic anomaly navigation, quantum-enhanced RF sensing) as a commercial and defence application. 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 — his filter-function and noise-spectroscopy formalism is now standard equipment in the NV community for designing the DEER and dynamical-decoupling sequences that deliver pT/sqrt(Hz) sensitivity; a candidate from that background would find the theoretical toolkit immediately familiar. Large, well-funded group with strong industry pathways.

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics | Schleier-Smith Lab @ Stanford
Summary:

Schleier-Smith's group uses optical-cavity-mediated interactions to entangle and spin-squeeze ensembles of trapped neutral atoms, generating metrologically useful entangled states for quantum-enhanced sensing, and is developing modular, networked atom-cavity systems as building blocks for distributed quantum sensor arrays and simulators.

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.