Dr. Winfried K. Hensinger
The article Scientists’ “recipe” to help build a quantum computer said
Quantum technology could be used to crack codes — valuable for national security — and is already used in some bank transactions. Future developments could involve understanding chemical reactions creating medicines, ultra-fast communications systems and seemingly impossible simulations, such as the creation of our universe.
Dr. Winfried Hensinger, Lecturer in Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics at the University of Sussex, was part of a team in the USA that has developed a new way of mass-manufacturing ion traps using microchip technology.
Dr. Hensinger says: “Making a nano sculpture to trap single atoms and control their motion is very difficult. What we have done is to refine the recipe used in microchip manufacture to make traps for single atoms. Now we could make any kind of trap we need, in the quantity needed. This takes us a step nearer to building the first quantum computer.”
Dr. Winfried K. Hensinger
is
Lecturer in Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics at
the University of Sussex.
Quantum theory can have powerful applications due to the possibility
of
implementing new quantum technologies such as the
quantum computer. While
such a device could have very important commercial and national security
applications due to the existence of quantum factoring algorithms, its
existence would revolutionize modern day science by allowing true quantum
simulations of systems that may be modeled classically only
insufficiently due to an in-principle limitation of current computer
technology. Recent developments in
ion trapping technology show that it
should be possible to build a quantum computer with trapped
ions.
Winfried’s interest is to develop methods to build such a device. For
this purpose
his research focuses on applied experimental quantum information science,
in particular the development of new scalable methods to build ion trap
arrays and the
entanglement generation with multiple
quantum bits. A
second complementary research direction is the exploration of quantum
phenomena and their connection to our “classical” world. One key interest
is the interaction of atomic and
condensed matter systems in the quantum
domain. His previous research focused on quantum nonlinear dynamics and
quantum chaos with cold atoms. Cold atoms and
Bose-Einstein condensates
may be used to explore the quantum-classical transition. During time
spent at NIST in Gaithersburg he demonstrated dynamical
tunnelling with a
Bose-Einstein condensate. Another area of interest consists of
innovations in
tertiary education, in particular, to make learning more
effective.
He coauthored
Dynamical tunneling of ultra-cold atoms,
Ion trap in a Semiconductor Chip,
Experimental tests of quantum nonlinear dynamics in atom
optics,
Scaling and Suppression of Anomalous Quantum Decoherence in Ion
Traps,
T-junction multi-zone ion trap array for two-dimensional ion
shuttling,
storage and manipulation,
Analysis of dynamical tunnelling experiments with a Bose-Einstein
condensate,
and authored
Pathways to increase problem solving skills, motivation and depth of
knowledge in a first year physics course.
Read his
full list of publications!
Winfried obtained his undergraduate degree
(Diplom-Vorpruefung)
at the
Ruprechts-Karls University in Heidelberg, Germany and then moved
to the
University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia where he was
awarded his MSc. degree. He continued on and obtained his PhD at the
University of Queensland under guidance of Halina Rubinsztein-Dunlop,
Norman Heckenberg and Gerard Milburn in the field of experimental
nonlinear quantum dynamics with ultracold atoms. During his PhD
candidature he spent an extended period at the
National Institute of
Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, USA in the group of Nobel
Laureate
William Phillips demonstrating dynamical tunnelling in a sodium
Bose-Einstein condensate. He obtained a Graduate Certificate in Higher
Education (Tertiary Education) at the University of Queensland concurrent
with his PhD studies restructuring a first year physics course. After
completing his PhD he spent three years as a FOCUS Research Fellow in the
group of Chris Monroe at the
University of Michigan, USA developing ways
to scale ion trap quantum information processing, leading into a still
ongoing collaboration. In 2005, he moved to
the
University of Sussex where he heads the
Ion Quantum Technology
group.