Image
Profile photo of Nicole Yunger Halpern
Person Info
First Name
Nicole
Last Name
Yunger Halpern
Organization Role / Title
Current Title
JQI Affiliate
Organization Roles
RQS Organization Roles
Contact Information
Email
nicoleyh.11@gmail.com
Email
nicoleyh@umd.edu
About

Nicole will be a NIST physicist, JQI affiliate, QuICS Fellow, and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Physics and IPST, beginning in fall 2021. She re-envisions 19th-century thermodynamics for the 21st century, using the mathematical toolkit of quantum information (QI) theory. She then applies QI thermodynamics as a lens through which to view the rest of science, gaining new perspectives on atomic, molecular, and optical physics; condensed matter; chemistry; high-energy physics; and biophysics. Nicole calls this research “quantum steampunk,” after the steampunk genre of art and literature that juxtaposes Victorian settings (à la thermodynamics) with futuristic technologies (à la QI). For an overview, see https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/quantum-steampunk-19th-century-science-meets-technology-of-today/.

Nicole graduated from Dartmouth College as a covaledictorian of her undergraduate class. She earned her Masters through Perimeter Scholars International at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. Pivoting from snow to sun, Nicole earned her PhD at Caltech, under John Preskill’s supervision. Her thesis won the international Ilya Prigogine Prize for a thermodynamics dissertation. She is continuing in her post as an ITAMP Postdoctoral Fellow at Harvard until summer 2021.

RQS Bio

Nicole Yunger Halpern is a physicist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and an adjunct assistant professor in the Department of Physics at the University of Maryland. She is also a Fellow of the Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science and an affiliate of the Joint Quantum Institute. Yunger Halpern re-envisions 19th-century thermodynamics for the 21st century, using the mathematical toolkit of quantum information theory. She received her doctorate in physics from Caltech in 2018.

Research Groups