Headlines

  • Help wanted: How to build a prepared and diverse quantum workforce
    “Quantum information technologies are at a tipping point in growing into a new economic pillar due to recent advances, federal funding and private investment," says CUbit Executive Director Philip Makotyn. “Inclusion and equity of is critical if we’re to meet the growing workforce and supply chain needs."
  • Playing a game of atomic musical chairs
    On a quantum level, how atoms and light interact has been a topic of interest for many years. In a new paper published in Science, JILA and NIST Fellow Jun Ye and his lab members report on how light scattering is affected by the quantum nature of the atoms—more specifically, the Pauli Exclusion Principle.
  • New cleanroom facility on CU Boulder campus will support the fabrication of ultra-small structures, enable big ideas
    The new $7.8M cleanroom will be in the Sustainability, Energy and Environment Laboratory (SEEL) building and is the 21st century machine shop that will enable a wide spectrum of research projects, in areas spanning from electronics, photonics and quantum science to environment, bio-medical and nanomedicine.
  • A magic recipe for a quantum interferometer
    JILA Fellows Ana Maria Rey and James K. Thompson have published paper in Physical Review Letters that discusses a new protocol that could make entangled quantum interferometers easier to produce and use, improving gravitational acceleration measurements.
  • ColdQuanta, JILA featured in new "Quantum State" video highlighting Front Range ecosystem
    Created by the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT), the film interviews CUbit Director Jun Ye, Associate Research Professor Ana Maria Rey, Dan Caruso of university startup ColdQuanta, and other members of CU Boulder's quantum community about the importance of quantum research and Colorado's prominence in the field.
  • CU Boulder launches new Quantum Engineering Initiative (QEI)
    Created in 2021, the Quantum Engineering Initiative (QEI) is a significant and strategic investment into translational quantum engineering research at CU Boulder—including educational components, faculty hiring efforts, and dedicated lab space for collaboration with partners both on and off campus.
  • Perfecting more areas of quantum computing: András Gyenis
    Assistant Professor András Gyenis is building artificial atoms with the goal of enabling quantum computing processes to operate longer and with less errors. Scientists hope the technology made possible by this work will eventually outrun the abilities of even our best supercomputers.
  • Diddams joins growing quantum expertise within CU Boulder engineering
    Professor Scott Diddams will serve in a leadership role in the newly formed Quantum Engineering Initiative—a significant investment into translational quantum engineering research that includes educational components, faculty hiring efforts, and dedicated lab space for collaboration.
  • Don’t react, interact: Looking into inert molecular gases
    In a paper published in Nature Physics, JILA researchers illustrated new quantum mechanical tricks in making a three-dimensional molecular gas unreactive, thus enjoying a long life (for a gas), while at the same time letting the molecules in the gas interact and socialize (thermalize) with each other.
  • JILA Fellow Shuo Sun is awarded the NSF QuIC-TAQS grant
    JILA Fellow Shuo Sun has been awarded an NSF Quantum Interconnect Challenges for Transformational Advances in Quantum Systems (QuIC-TAQS) grant to explore innovative and unique ideas for applying and developing quantum science in the specific area of quantum interconnection.
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