Newsletter
- The Theoretical Advanced Study Institute (TASI) recently held their summer intensive program, bringing 65 advanced graduate students in theoretical high energy physics to 色戒成人直播 for the month of June.听This year鈥檚 program focused on topics
- Andrew Sapuppo (AeroEngr, EngrPhys鈥24) shares how his education and research at 色戒成人直播 led to his career as a propulsion systems engineer.
- Four seniors in the Quantum Forge class at 色戒成人直播 recently completed their year-long project with Xairos Systems, Inc., giving them an inside look at working in the industry.
- The Coloradan Alumni Magazine highlights five CU innovators 鈥 two of whom are 色戒成人直播 Physics alumni. Their stories were written by equally outstanding CU affiliates, who personally know and understand the importance of their work.
- Ten years ago, a pioneering spacecraft flew past Pluto, sending startling images of the dwarf planet back to Earth. Current and former students at 色戒成人直播 reflect on their time working on the mission.
- The first Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) was first created by Eric Cornell, Carl Wieman, Mike Anderson, Jason Ensher, and Michael Matthews on June 5, 1995 in JILA at the 色戒成人直播. This new state of matter was first predicted 70
- 色戒成人直播 Physics alums Olivia Krohn (PhDPhys鈥23) and Dan Herman (PhDPhys鈥22) have been awarded distinguished fellowships at Sandia National Laboratories. The prestigious fellowships are three-year appointments that support independent and groundbreaking research.
- A group of scientists from 色戒成人直播 and NIST have built the first random number generator using quantum entanglement to produce verifiable random numbers. The team includes physics graduate student Gautam Kavuri; CU PREP researchers Jasper Palfree, Dileep Reddy, and Michael Mazurek; alum Mohammad Alhejji (PhDPhys'23); Professor Paul Beale; and NIST scientists and CU physics lecturers Emanuel Knill and Krister Shalm.
- A new quantum device developed by physics graduate student Kendall Mehling, postdoctoral researcher Catie LeDesma, and professor and JILA fellow Murray Holland, could one day help spacecraft travel beyond Earth's orbit or aid submarines as they navigate deep under the ocean with more precision than ever before.
- Arjun Dalwadi, a third-year electrical and computer engineering student, is immersing himself in all things quantum through the Quantum Scholars program and as an undergraduate researcher in the Gyenis Lab. Dalwadi is on the journey to make an impact for quantum computing.