![colorful images from physics experiments](/sites/default/files/2022-10/DegenerateModeVis.png)
The Schine lab borrows ideas and techniques from atomic physics, quantum optics, quantum information science, and condensed matter physics to address a range of questions from across quantum science. Some are applications driven: How can strong light-matter coupling provide new tools for manipulation of quantum systems? Other questions are more fundamental: What role does dissipation play for emergent behaviors of quantum systems beyond the correspondence principle? Our vehicle for these investigations will be a carefully engineered optical cavity coupled to a tweezer-trapped array of cold atoms. Cavity-enhanced coupling between light and individually controlled atoms will be foundational for new control and measurement protocols for quantum information processing as well as for engineered dissipation for quantum many-body systems -- either of neutral atoms or strongly interacting photons.
New article posted to arXiv!
An atomic boson sampler, Aaron. W. Young, Shawn Geller, William J. Eckner, Nathan Schine, Scott Glancy, Emanuel Knill, and Adam M. Kaufman, arXiv:2307.06936, (2023).
Contact Us
We are always looking for excellent physicists to join our lab. If you are interested in joining us as a postdoc, grad student, or undergraduate researcher, please contact Prof. Schine directly.
The Schine Lab
The University of Maryland
Physical Sciences Complex
4296 Stadium Dr.
College Park, MD 20742
Prof. Schine's phone: (301) 314-2161
Prof. Schine's email: nschine -at- umd.edu