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Hero
interface of atomic, molecular, optical (AMO) physics, quantum information, and condensed matter (as well as many-body) physics
Group Lead
About

We are a theoretical research group working at the interface of quantum optics, quantum information science, and condensed matter physics.

Postdoc and graduate student positions available: email av[group leader's last name]@gmail.com

Rogue rubidium leads to atomic anomaly

The behavior of a few rubidium atoms in a cloud of 40,000 hardly seems important. But a handful of the tiny particles with the wrong energy may cause a cascade of effects that could impact future quantum computers. Some proposals for quantum devices use Rydberg atoms—atoms with highly excited electrons that roam far from the nucleus—because they interact strongly with each other and offer easy handles for controlling their individual and collective behavior. Rubidium is one of the most popular elements for experimenting with Rydberg physics. Now, a team of researchers led by JQI Fellows Trey Porto, Steven Rolston and Alexey Gorshkov have discovered an unwanted side effect of trying to manipulate strongly interacting rubidium atoms: When they used lasers to drive some of the atoms into Rydberg states, they excited a much larger fraction than expected. The creation of too many of these high-energy atoms may result from overlooked “contaminant” states and could be problematic for proposals that rely on the controlled manipulation of Rydberg atoms to create quantum computers.

Beyond Majorana: Ultracold gases as a platform for observing exotic robust quantum states

The quantum Hall effect, discovered in the early 1980s, is a phenomenon that was observed in a two-dimensional gas of electrons existing at the interface between two semiconductor layers. Subject to the severe criteria of very high material purity and very low temperatures, the electrons, when under the influence of a large magnetic field, will organize themselves into an ensemble state featuring remarkable properties.
Many physicists believe that quantum Hall physics is not unique to electrons, and thus it should be possible to observe this behavior elsewhere, such as in a collection of trapped ultracold atoms. Experiments at JQI and elsewhere are being planned to do just that. On the theoretical front, scientists at JQI and University of Maryland have also made progress, which they describe in the journal Physical Review Letters. The result, to be summarized here, proposes using quantum matter made from a neutral atomic gas, instead of electrons. In this new design, elusive exotic states that are predicted to occur in certain quantum Hall systems should emerge. These states, known as parafermionic zero modes, may be useful in building robust quantum gates.