Dr. Sorin Paraoanu
Sorin Paraoanu, Ph.D. has studied at the University of Bucharest
(diploma in physics 1994, diploma in philosophy 1995, DSA/licentiate
in physics 1995) and at the University of Urbana-Champaign (M.Sc.
1999, Ph.D. 2001).
Sorin has held research positions at the Institute of
Physics and
Nuclear Engineering in Bucharest, and at the University of
Jyväkylä
(Finland), where he has been employed as post-doc, Marie Curie fellow,
adjunct professor, and Academy research fellow (since 2005). Currently
he is a senior scientist in the Low Temperature Laboratory at Aalto
University (Helsinki, Finland).
His main research interests include quantum gases, quantum computing
with superconducting qubits, and nanomagnetism.
He authored
Evolution of fragmented states, and
How Do Schrödinger Cats Die?, and
Localization of the relative phase via measurements, and
coauthored
Enhancement of sudden death of entanglement for driven
qubits,
Fidelity for Multimode Thermal Squeezed States,
Decay of entanglement in coupled, driven systems with bipartite
decoherence,
Generation and propagation of entanglement in driven coupled-qubit
systems,
Measurement-induced entanglement of two superconducting
qubits,
Fabrication of Nb-based superconducting single electron
transistor.