Meet Our Authors

  • PDF / 325,488 Bytes
  • 3 Pages / 585 x 783 pts Page_size
  • 51 Downloads / 148 Views

DOWNLOAD

REPORT


ley Center for Spintronics and Quantum Computation, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA; email [email protected]. Buckley is currently a physics graduate student at the University of California, Santa Barbara, advised under Professor David Awschalom. He received his BS degree in mechanical engineering and engineering physics from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, performing undergraduate research under Professor Roger D. Kirby. His research interests include coherent optical and spin interactions exhibited by optically addressable defect spins in solids. Greg Calusine Center for Spintronics and Quantum Computation, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA; email [email protected]. Calusine is a graduate student in the Physics Department at the University of California, Santa Barbara, advised by Professor David Awschalom. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2007 with a degree in physics and a minor in mathematics. His current research focuses on searching for new defect qubit candidates in materials that are well suited for traditional semiconductor device fabrication. Lilian Childress McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; email [email protected]. Childress is an assistant professor at McGill University in Canada. She performed her doctoral work on NV centers in the group of Professor Mikhail Lukin at Harvard University. In 2007, she joined the faculty at Bates College, where she continued to study nuclear spins in diamond. She spent much of 2011 as a visiting researcher in Professor Ronald Hanson’s group before joining Professor Jack Harris’ group at Yale University as a postdoctoral associate. Andrei Faraon California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, USA; email [email protected]. Faraon is an assistant professor of applied physics and materials science at the California Institute of Technology. He holds a BS degree in physics from Caltech (2004), an MS degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University (2009), and a PhD degree in applied physics also from Stanford (2009). Faraon’s interests focus on developing new photonic technologies based on the fundamentals of light matter interaction at the quantum level. He has published over 25 journal articles and co-authored three book chapters.

DOI: 10.1557/mrs.2013.25

© 2013 Materials Research Society

MRS BULLETIN • VOLUME 38 • FEBRUARY 2013 • www.mrs.org/bulletin

131

MEET OUR AUTHORS Michael S. Grinolds Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA; tel. 617-495-8599; and email [email protected]. Grinolds is a PhD student studying physics at Harvard University, working with Professor Amir Yacoby on spin-based magnetometry and quantum information processing in diamond. Specifically, he and his co-workers have been developing a scanning magnetometer using a single NV center in diamond. He earned his BS degree in physics from the California Institute of Technology in 2008.

Sungkun Hong School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA