|
Arpit Dua Graduate Student
I am currently working on topics in the area of topological quantum computing. You can find our recent work on defects in Toric code here :- http://journals.aps.org/prb/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevB.92.245139 . A subsequent work with the abstract as mentioned here :- http://meetings.aps.org/Meeting/MAR16/Session/A44.4 will be uploaded soon on arxiv.
|
|
|
Connor Hann Graduate School Student
Connor received a B.S. in physics and a minor in mathematics from Duke University, where he studied quantum Monte Carlo methods as well as mathematical models of quasicrystals. He joined Yale’s physics department as a PhD student in 2016, and has since been working with Liang Jiang on robust qubit readout and quantum RAM. He is originally from Virigina and enjoys hiking and running in his spare time.
|
|
|
Liang Jiang, Ph.D. Professor
We have moved to the University of Chicago. Please visit our new group webpage.
|
|
|
Stefan Krastanov Graduate Student Website
Graduated High School of Math and Science, Burgas, Bulgaria in 2008. Obtained B.Sc. and M.Sc. from ENS Lyon, France in 2013. Enjoys ice cream.
|
|
|
Linshu Li Graduate Student
Linshu was born in Xi’an, a historic city in China. He received his undergraduate degree in Physics at Nanjing University, where he studied surface plasmon and whispering gallery modes, and won the outstanding graduate award. At Yale, Linshu is now working on novel quantum error correcting codes, long distance quantum communication and quantum networks. He likes badminton, skiing and American politics in his leisure time.
|
|
|
Wenlong Ma Postdoctoral Associate
Wenlong was born in Handan, China. He obtained his B.Sc. from the University of Science and Technology Beijing in 2010, and Ph.D. from Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2015. He was a postdoctoral fellow in the Chinese University of Hong Kong from 2015 to 2017, working with Ren-Bao Liu on spin decoherence and quantum sensing. In August 2017, he joined the Jiang group to work on quantum control and quantum error correction.
|
|
|
Kyungjoo Noh Graduate Student
Kyungjoo was born and raised in Seoul, South Korea. He graduated from Seoul National University with a B.Sc. in physics. While in SNU, he worked with Uwe R. Fischer on the dynamics of open quantum systems and quantum thermalization. He came to Yale in 2015, and have worked on the simulation of Lindbladian dissipative dynamics with Liang Jiang. Currently, he is interested in the physics of localization.
https://sites.google.com/site/kyungjoonohphysics/
|
|
|
Chiao-Hsuan Wang Postdoctoral Associate
Chiao-Hsuan was born in Taiwan. She received her Bachelor and Master’s degree in Physics from National Taiwan University, where she studied quantum entanglement and emergent gravity with Pisin Chen. She completed her Ph.D. in Physics at the University of Maryland, College Park. While in UMD, she worked with Jacob M. Taylor on quantum optics, matter-light interactions, quantum simulation, and condensed matter theory. In 2018, she joined Liang Jiang’s group at Yale with current interests including quantum transduction between microwave and optical modes, quantum information processing with superconducting circuits, and fault-tolerant bosonic quantum error correction.
|
|
|
Mengzhen Zhang Graduate Student |
|
|
Changchun Zhong Postdoctoral Associate
Changchun was born and raised in Ruijin, China. He came to US in 2012 and obtained a Ph.D. in physics from Purdue University in 2017, then joined Liang’s group at Yale. He used to work on the theory of General relativity and black hole, Rydberg atoms and mesoscopic quantum physics. His current interests are quantum information theory and is now working on continuous variable quantum computations. He loves Math riddles in the spare time, like the following one:
If a blind man were given 50 coins, with 10 of them heads up. Is there a strategy for him to divide the coins into two groups, each having the same number of coins heads up?
|
|
|
Sisi Zhou Graduate Student
Sisi was born and raised in Nanjing, China. She graduated from Nanjing University with a B.Sc. in physics. During her undergraduate years, she worked on quantum measurements, quantum walks and Hamiltonian simulation. She joined the Physics Ph.D. program at Yale in 2016, and is currently working on quantum metrology and quantum error correction.
|
|