Archive

Archive

 
30 June 2021

Kin Fai Mak
Cornell University, USA

Strongly correlated excitonic insulator in Coulomb-coupled bilayers
Excitonic insulators (EIs) arise from the formation of bound electron-hole pairs (excitons) in semiconductors and provide a solid-state platform for quantum many-boson physics ...
more

 
16 June 2021

Munira Khalil
University of Washington, USA
 
Femtosecond Coherent Multidimensional Vibronic Spectroscopy
Multidimensional coherent spectroscopy such as two-dimensional infrared and two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy have become important tools to monitor complex non-equilibrium quantum phenomena. Recently we have developed multicolor spectroscopy combining a train of infrared and optical pulses to probe coupled vibrational and electronic coordinates ...
more

 
2 June 2021

Jennifer Ogilvie
University of Michigan, USA
 
Shedding New Light on Photosynthetic Systems Using Multidimensional Spectroscopies
The primary events of photosynthesis occur on ultrafast timescales with high quantum efficiency. Elucidating the design principles of photosynthetic systems remains an outstanding challenge that has the potential to impact our design of artificial light-harvesting materials ...
more

 
24 March 2021

Xiaodong Xu
University of Washington, USA
 
Spin, Charge, and Phonon Coupling Effects in 2D Materials
The coupling between spin, charge, and lattice degrees of freedom plays an important role in a wide range of fundamental phenomena. 2D material is an emerging platform for studying these coupling effects. In this talk, I will present a couple examples along this direction ...
more

 
10 March 2021

Hui Deng
University of Michigan, USA
 
Controlling Coherent Light-Matter Interactions in Semiconductors
Coherent light-matter interactions provide a powerful means to study and control interacting matter excitations. Using the mature, III-Arsenide semiconductor system, we incoporate a designable photonic crystal mirror to control hybrid light-matter coupled modes (polaritons) ...
more

 
24 February 2021

Jelena Vuckovic
Stanford University, USA
 
Connecting and scaling semiconductor quantum systems
At the core of most quantum technologies, including quantum networks, quantum computers and quantum simulators, is the development of homogeneous, long lived qubits with excellent optical interfaces, and the development of high efficiency and robust optical interconnects for such qubits ...
more

 
10 February 2021

Jie Shan
Cornell University, USA
 
Moiré superlattices: a new Hubbard model simulator?
The Hubbard model, first formulated by physicist John Hubbard in the 1960s, is a simple theoretical model of interacting quantum particles in a lattice. The model is thought to capture the essential physics of high-temperature superconductors, magnetic insulators, and other complex emergent quantum many-body ground states ...
more

 
13 January 2021

Prineha Narang
Harvard University, USA
 
Controlling Correlations: Linear-, Nonlinear-, and Hydrodynamics in Quantum Matter
The physics of quantum matter is rich with excited-state and nonequilibrium effects, but many of these phenomena remain poorly understood and, consequently, technologically unexplored. My group’s research, therefore, focuses on how quantum systems behave, particularly away from equilibrium, and how we can harness these effects ...
more

 
9 December 2020

Benjamin Lev
Stanford University, USA

To thermalize or not to thermalize?

We will discuss two experiments designed to investigate how integrable quantum many-body systems do or do not thermalize in the presence of integrability breaking perturbations. In the first experiment, a quantum Newton's cradle is set in motion under different strengths of a magnetic interaction among the dysprosium atoms in an ultracold 1D gas ...
more

 
25 November 2020

Maiken Mikkelsen
Duke University, USA

Extreme Photonics with Nanogap Cavities

Nano- and quantum materials with unique optical properties hold the potential for breakthroughs in a wide range of areas from ultrafast optoelectronics and on-chip components for quantum information science to improved bio-sensing. An exciting opportunity to realize such new materials lies in controlling the local electromagnetic environment on the atomic- and molecular-scale (~1-10 nm), which enables extreme local field enhancements and drastically modified local density of states ...
more

 
11 November 2020

Frank Koppens
ICFO - The Institute of Photonic Sciences, Barcelona, Spain

Polaritons and ultrasmall cavities in twisted 2D material heterostructures
Two-dimensional (2D) materials offer extraordinary potential for control of light and light-matter interactions at the atomic scale. Twisted 2D materials has recently attracted a lot of interest, due to the capability to induce moiré superlattices and discovery of electronic correlated phases. In this talk, we present nanoscale optical techniques such as near-field optical microscopy, and reveal with nanometer spatial resolution unique observations of topological domain wall boundaries and interband collective modes in charge neutral twisted-bilayer graphene near the magic angle ...
more
Go to Editor View