Abstracts

Quantum science with microscopically-controlled arrays of alkaline-earth atoms

Presenting Author: Adam Kaufman, UC Boulder

Quantum science with neutral atoms has seen great advances in the past two decades. Many of these advances follow from the development of new techniques for cooling, trapping, and controlling atomic samples. In this talk, I will describe ongoing work where we have explored a new type of atom - alkaline-earth(-like) atoms - for optical tweezer trapping, a technology which allows microscopic control of arrays of 100s to potentially 1000s of atoms. While their increased complexity leads to challenges, alkaline-earth atoms offer new scientific opportunities by virtue of their rich internal degrees of freedom. Combining features of these atoms with tweezer-based control has impacted multiple areas in quantum science, including quantum information processing, quantum simulation, and quantum metrology.

(Session 1 : Thursday from 8:30 am - 9:15 am)

 

SQuInT Chief Organizer
Akimasa Miyake, Associate Professor
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SQuInT Co-Organizer
Hartmut Haeffner, Associate Professor, UC Berkeley
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Alberto Alonso, Postdoc, UC Berkeley
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Cunlu Zhou, Postdoc, UNM

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