Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 24 de abr. de 2024 · Karamlou and Oliver are joined by Research Scientist Jeff Grover, postdoc Ilan Rosen, and others in the departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and of Physics at MIT, at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and at Wellesley College and the University of Maryland. The research appears today in Nature. Assessing entanglement

  2. Jeff Grover, Ph.D. Research Scientist, Research Laboratory of Electronics Room 13-3006 jagrover (at) mit.edu . Jeff Grover is a Research Scientist in the EQuS group. He focuses on software infrastructure and building extensible calibration, control, and metrology protocols for multi-qubit systems.

  3. Advances In Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics 66, 439-505. , 2017. 112. 2017. Sub-Doppler cooling of neutral atoms in a grating magneto-optical trap. J Lee, JA Grover, LA Orozco, SL Rolston. Journal of the Optical Society of America B 30 (11), 2869-2874. , 2013.

  4. Jeffrey Grover is known for Dark Waters (2019), I Feel Pretty (2018) and Succession (2018). More at IMDbPro. Contact info. Agent info. Resume. Add to list. Awards. 2 wins & 3 nominations. Photos 23. Known for. Dark Waters. 7.6. Edward Wallace. 2019. I Feel Pretty. 5.6. Silver Fox. 2018. Succession. 8.8. TV Series. Gavin Bentner. 2021 • 1 ep. Feud.

  5. See Photos. View the profiles of people named Jeff Grover. Join Facebook to connect with Jeff Grover and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to...

  6. mitnano.mit.edu › events › nano-summitJeff Grover | MIT.nano

    18 de mar. de 2024 · Dr. Jeff Grover is a research scientist and co-PI in the Engineering Quantum Systems (EQuS) group at MIT. He focuses on software infrastructure and building extensible calibration, control, and metrology protocols for superconducting qubit systems.

  7. At JQI, Jeff focused on laser cooling and trapping of neutral atoms and interfacing those atoms with the evanescent field of an optical nanofiber. He used photon-counting techniques to study atom-light interactions. At MIT, he is applying quantum optics methods to enhance qubit readout and developing logical qubits for quantum error correction.