Department Colloquium | A Nuclear Clock
Jun Ye (JILA, National Institute of Standards and Technology and University of Colorado)
Lasers and quantum science have fueled revolutionary developments in atomic, molecular, and fundamental physics. Scaling up quantum systems to ever increasing sizes promises to open new discovery opportunities. Quantum technology has brought tens of thousands of atoms to minute-long coherence times for atomic clocks, and it is now also knocking on the door of nuclear physics. The combination of ultrafast optics and precision metrology has built us new tools such as a vacuum ultraviolet frequency comb, enabling the recent breakthrough of quantum-state-resolved laser spectroscopy of thorium-229 nuclear transition. This unification of precision metrology and nuclear physics sparks new ideas for testing fundamental physics and promises nuclear-based clock with billions of nuclear absorbers.
Building: | West Hall |
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Event Type: | Workshop / Seminar |
Tags: | Physics, Science |
Source: | Happening @ Michigan from Department Colloquia, Department of Physics |
Events
Featured
Mar
29
Saturday Morning Physics | ZEUS: The Highest Power Laser in the U.S.
Karl Krushelnick, Professor: Nuclear Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Physics. Director, ZEUS laser facility and Gerard Mourou Center for Ultrafast Optical Science
10:30 AM
170 & 182 Auditoriums
Weiser Hall
Upcoming
Mar
28
“Conversations in Equity and Inclusion” Presents:
Dr. Jessica Lu, Associate Prof. & Chair, UC Berkeley
9:30 AM
411
West Hall
Mar
28
HET Seminar | Quantum mechanics and observers for gravity in a closed universe
Daniel Harlow (MIT)
3:00 PM
3481
Randall Laboratory
Mar
31
HEP-Astro Seminar | Supernova Neutrinos: from 1987 to [insert date here]
Benjamin Monreal (Case Western Reserve University)
3:00 PM
340
West Hall