Job openings & fellowships Job openings
Select Page
Schools
From October 25, 2023 to October 27, 2023

All day

Place: TIFR Hyderabad (India)

Sanjukta Roy (Raman Research Institute)

Biography:

Dr Sanjukta Roy is a Scientist (Principal Investigator) at Raman Research Institute, Bangalore. Her research is focused on Quantum Technologies using ultra-cold Rydberg atoms, Quantum Simulation with ultra-cold Quantum Mixtures in optical potentials, Spin correlation spectroscopy and Few-body physics. She obtained her PhD from the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, where she realised India's first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). She did her Post-doctoral work at Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, in the Lab of Claude Cohen- Tannoudji (Nobel Laureate, Physics, 1997) where she worked on metastable He BEC experiment. She did her subsequent Post-Doctoral research at the European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy, Florence, Italy, where she worked on experiments on Efimov physics with ultra-cold atoms and 3D Anderson localisation of matter waves in disordered potentials. She has won several awards and honours: the DST award for attending the Lindau Nobel laureates meeting, a Letter of appreciation from the Prime Minister of India for indigenously realising the first Bose-Einstein condensate in India and Outstanding Reviewer awards (2016 and 2019) from IOP Publishing, UK.

Lecture: "Ultracold atoms and Quantum Gases"

In this lecture, I will give an introduction to the physics of ultra-cold atoms and Quantum gases and experimental methods for their realisation in the Laboratory. Ultra-cold Rydberg atoms and Quantum gases in optical traps are highly controllable systems which offer a versatile platform for Quantum Technology applications such as Quantum computing and Quantum sensing. I will give an overview of Quantum Technologies with cold Rydberg atoms and Quantum gas mixtures in the final part of this lecture.

Schools
From October 25, 2023 to October 27, 2023

All day

Place: TIFR Hyderabad (India)

Sanjukta Roy (Raman Research Institute)

Biography:

Dr Sanjukta Roy is a Scientist (Principal Investigator) at Raman Research Institute, Bangalore. Her research is focused on Quantum Technologies using ultra-cold Rydberg atoms, Quantum Simulation with ultra-cold Quantum Mixtures in optical potentials, Spin correlation spectroscopy and Few-body physics. She obtained her PhD from the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai, where she realised India's first Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). She did her Post-doctoral work at Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, in the Lab of Claude Cohen- Tannoudji (Nobel Laureate, Physics, 1997) where she worked on metastable He BEC experiment. She did her subsequent Post-Doctoral research at the European Laboratory for Non-Linear Spectroscopy, Florence, Italy, where she worked on experiments on Efimov physics with ultra-cold atoms and 3D Anderson localisation of matter waves in disordered potentials. She has won several awards and honours: the DST award for attending the Lindau Nobel laureates meeting, a Letter of appreciation from the Prime Minister of India for indigenously realising the first Bose-Einstein condensate in India and Outstanding Reviewer awards (2016 and 2019) from IOP Publishing, UK.

Lecture: "Ultracold atoms and Quantum Gases"

In this lecture, I will give an introduction to the physics of ultra-cold atoms and Quantum gases and experimental methods for their realisation in the Laboratory. Ultra-cold Rydberg atoms and Quantum gases in optical traps are highly controllable systems which offer a versatile platform for Quantum Technology applications such as Quantum computing and Quantum sensing. I will give an overview of Quantum Technologies with cold Rydberg atoms and Quantum gas mixtures in the final part of this lecture.