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Researchers to Push Quantum Science Beyond Physics for High-Impact Innovations
Ronald Walsworth will direct the newly announced Quantum Technology Center, which will combine physics with other disciplines to develop groundbreaking advances.
The University of Maryland today announced the launch of the Quantum Technology Center (QTC), which aims to translate quantum physics research into innovative technologies.
The center will capitalize on the university’s strong research programs and partnerships in quantum science and systems engineering, and pursue collaborations with industry and government laboratories to help take promising quantum advances from the lab to the marketplace. QTC will also train students in the development and application of quantum technologies to produce a workforce educated in quantum-related engineering.
The new center is a collaboration between the Department of Physics and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
"The Quantum Technology Center will add to the University of Maryland’s world-renowned leadership in the quantum fields, including physics, engineering, computer science and materials research," said Laurie Locascio, vice president for research at UMD. "This new center will build on these strengths to develop future quantum technology and new applications, and to train students and researchers in quantum technology."
The announcement comes at a pivotal time when quantum science research is expanding beyond physics into materials science, engineering, computer science, chemistry, and biology. Scientists across these disciplines are looking for ways to exploit quantum physics to build powerful computers, develop secure communication networks and improve sensing and imaging capabilities. In the future, quantum technology could also impact fields such as artificial intelligence, energy and medicine.
The director of QTC will be Ronald Walsworth, who recently joined UMD after serving on the faculty at Harvard University and as a senior physicist at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
“We are thrilled that Dr. Ronald Walsworth has chosen the University of Maryland and our commitment to accelerating quantum research and discovery,” said Darryll J. Pines, dean of the A. James Clark School of Engineering and Farvardin Professor. “As a signature senior hire for Maryland and as the inaugural director of the Quantum Technology Center, Dr. Walsworth brings a critical expertise in quantum sensing, measurement and instrumentation to College Park.”
Walsworth is an expert in using quantum physics to develop advanced measurement tools for medicine, planetary science and fundamental physics. He holds several patents on a quantum sensing technology that uses an optically active defect in diamond to probe tiny changes in electromagnetic fields and temperature.
Walsworth’s lab spun off two startups that apply quantum sensing technology to biomedical diagnostics, and he has served as a scientific advisor for several technology companies including Quantum Diamond Technologies Inc., Butterfly Network, Quantum-Si and Hyperfine Research.
He is also a fellow of the American Physical Society and received its 2005 Francis M. Pipkin Award for his work in developing and applying precision measurement tools. Walsworth received his bachelor’s degree in physics from Duke University in 1984 and his Ph.D. in physics from Harvard University in 1991.
“I am excited to join the strong quantum community at the University of Maryland and work together to make QTC a world leader in quantum technology development, translation and education,” said Walsworth, the Minta Martin Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering with a joint appointment in the Department of Physics.
QTC will initially draw members from the physics, computer science, and electrical and computer engineering departments. New faculty members, including physics Assistant Professors Alicia Kollár and Norbert Linke, and electrical and computer engineering Assistant Professor Cheng Gong.
“We are proud to work with our colleagues in engineering to jointly establish the Quantum Technology Center,” said Amitabh Varshney, dean of the College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences. “QTC will enable the rapid development of quantum technologies through high-impact research that spans sensors, secure communication, and advanced computation.”
QTC will have laboratory space in the Physical Sciences Complex, the Jeong H. Kim Engineering Building and the Clark School’s new E.A. Fernandez IDEA (Innovate, Design and Engineer for America) Factory, which is scheduled to open in 2021 to support creative innovation and entrepreneurship by students and faculty. The center will be administered through UMD’s Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics.
The new center will add to the university’s world-renowned leadership in the quantum fields, which includes being ranked No. 6 in quantum and atomic physics by U.S. News & World Report. UMD is also home to two quantum research partnerships with the National Institute of Standards and Technology—the Joint Quantum Institute and the Joint Center for Quantum Information and Computer Science—as well as a research collaboration with the Army Research Laboratory.
In addition, UMD quantum faculty members are entrepreneurs. The quantum computing startup IonQ, which aims to bring general-purpose quantum computers to market, was co-founded by Distinguished University Professor Christopher Monroe.
A. James Clark School of Engineering College of Computer, Mathematical, and Natural Sciences
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