Adam Kaufman

Marsh

Brendan investigates many-body quantum physics with ultracold atoms and photons to realize novel quantum systems and harness them for practical or computational benefit. Before joining JILA as a post-doctoral researcher with Prof. Adam Kaufman and Prof. Cindy Regal, he completed his Ph.D. with Prof. Benjamin Lev at Stanford in the area of multimode cavity QED.

Harle

Nikhil completed his undergraduate degree in intensive physics at Yale, where he worked with Peter Schiffer and Michel Devoret on projects studying emergent order in artificial spin ice systems and fundamental paradigms of quantum mechanics (in addition to a brief foray into COVID-19 misinformation during the pandemic). After working on projects implementing digital quantum simulations at IBM, Nikhil started his PhD at UChicago under Hannes Bernien, where he worked on a second generation dual-species tweezer array before transferring to JILA.

Welsch

Owen is an undergraduate student studying physics and computer science at CU Boulder. He is interested in quantum information science and using computational tools to advance our understanding of fundamental processes. He likes applying problem solving techniques from these subjects to design challenges in areas such as robotics. He joined the Kaufman lab as an intern on the Lithium quantum gas microscope experiment. Through this opportunity he has enjoyed learning about atomic physics, quantum simulation, and experimental design.

Baumgaertner

Alex joined the Kaufman group as a postdoctoral researcher after completing his PhD in the group of Prof. Tilman Esslinger at ETH Zurich, where he explored topological and dissipative phenomena in a degenerate rubidium Bose-Einstein condensate coupled to ultrahigh-finesse cavity modes. His passion for tabletop AMO experiments began during his undergraduate studies at the University of Heidelberg, where he worked in the lab of Prof.

Press Clipping: JILA Fellows Jun Ye, Ana Maria Rey, and Adam Kaufman highlighted in "Financial Times" Article

Submitted by kennac on

JILA and NIST Fellows Ana Maria Rey, Jun Ye, and Adam Kaufman have been highlighted in a recent Financial Times article, "The Mind-Bending New Science of Measuring Time," by Oliver Roeder. The piece delves into the forefront of precision timekeeping and its implications for understanding fundamental physics.