Faculty of Physics welcomes assistant professor Andreas Nunnenkamp

16.09.2021

How can we create, control, and exploit quantum coherence in synthetic many-body systems? This and related questions are investigated by Andreas Nunnenkamp who joins as an assistant professor in the group “Quantum optics, Quantum nanophysics, and Quantum information“. In his research, Andreas Nunnenkamp employs among others methods from quantum control and many-body physics.

Andreas Nunnenkamp currently works on the interplay of interactions, topology, and disorder and their control via measurement, backaction, and dissipation. He aims at developing novel designs for quantum technologies and at contributing to a deeper understanding of the dynamics of many-body systems. He collaborates frequently with experimental groups in the fields of optomechanics, ultracold gases, superconducting circuits, and optomagnonics.

Academic CV

2000-2005 First degree (Diplom) in Physics at the University of Bonn, Germany

2005-2008 DPhil in Physics at the University of Oxford at the Clarendon Laboratory

2008-2011 Postdoc at Yale University (New Haven, US) in the Physics Department

2011-2014 Postdoc at the University of Basel in the Department of Physics

2014-2020 Royal Society University Research Fellow (Group leader) at the University of Cambridge at the Cavendish Laboratory (Department of Physics)

2020-2021 Royal Society University Research Fellow and Assistant Professor at the University of Nottingham (UK) in the School of Physics and Astronomy

since September 2021 Tenure-Track Assistant Professor for Theoretical Many-Body Quantum Physics in the research group "Quantum optics, Quantum nanophysics, and Quantum information" in the Faculty of Physics at the University of Vienna

Publikationen:

publons.com/researcher/2851170/andreas-nunnenkamp/

scholar.google.ch/citations

 

 

© Ass.-Prof. Dipl.-Phys. Andreas Nunnenkamp, PhD