Physics research underlies the progress in almost every area of science, from chemistry to biology to electronics to medicine, and physicists defined the html code for the Internet as we know it. You want to see tumors in your body, try tools from physics. You want to see better, try laser surgery using the math that we astronomers invented to see better on the ground and in space. You want to see oil reserves underground, use sound waves and the math that physicists invented.

Then of course there is the cultural benefit of understanding who we are and where we could go if we try.

-- Dr. John C. Mather, 2006 Nobel Laureate in Physics

Faculty Research

Quantum Information Science

Theory

Ivan Deutsch

Ivan Deutsch

Quantum optics, quantum information & control, atomic physics

Akimasa Miyake

Akimasa Miyake

Quantum information, quantum computation, quantum many-body physics

Experiment

Victor Acosta

Victor Acosta

Quantum sensing, NV centers, biological and chemical imaging

F. Elohim Becerra-Chavez

F. Elohim Becerra-Chavez

Quantum optics, nonlinear optics, quantum Information, cold atoms

Tara Drake

Tara Drake

Frequency combs, nonlinear & quantum optics, integrated photonics

Affiliated faculty from other departments

Tameem Albash - Electrical and Computer Engineering

Susan Atlas - Chemistry & Chemical Biology

Milad Marvian - Electrical and Computer Engineering

Affiliated Research Faculty

Andrew Landahl - Quantum algorithms, error-correction, fault-tolerance, computing architectures

Pablo Poggi - Quantum information theory, quantum control, quantum simulation

Rolando Somma - Quantum algorithms and computation

Related Websites:

Center for Quantum Information and Control (CQuIC)

Southwest Quantum Information and Technology (SQuInT)