Quantum fluids mix like oil and water
Rayleigh–Taylor instability responsible for mushroom clouds appears in a two-component BEC
Read article: Quantum fluids mix like oil and water
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Ali Lezeik is a PhD student contributor to Physics World who is currently working on quantum optics at the Leibniz University Hannover. He is part of the Very Large Baseline Atom Interferometry (VLBAI) facility, which explores the behaviour of ultracold quantum gases in a gravitational field. He obtained his BSc degree from the Lebanese University and pursued his MSc degree at the University of Cologne where he worked on quantum gravity.
Ali likes to investigate the interface of gravity and the quantum world, and hopes to narrow the gap between theory and experiment. Whenever outside the lab, you will find him in the kitchen cooking Mediterranean food or at the nearest bakery having a pretzel.
Rayleigh–Taylor instability responsible for mushroom clouds appears in a two-component BEC
Read article: Quantum fluids mix like oil and water
New method in atom interferometry is used for inertial sensing
Read article: Magnetically launched atoms sense motion
Colorado-based researchers have reduced the systematic uncertainty in their optical lattice clock to a record low. Ali Lezeik explains how they did it
Read article: The most precise timekeeping device ever built
Measuring the free-fall rate of different type of atoms in space could unveil hidden mechanisms of gravity
Read article: Space-borne atoms herald new tests of Einstein’s equivalence principle
Two ions entangled over a distance of 230 m make a solid foundation for quantum networking
Read article: Entangled ions set long-distance record
First demonstrations of ytterbium atoms in a quantum processor could lead to a new platform for quantum computation
Read article: New neutral-atom qubit offers advantages for quantum computing
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