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News Archive

Opening of NanoArt exhibition: Lens(less)ness

The NanoArt project of QuTech, initiated by Laurens Feije and Gerben Timmer from Taminiau Lab, had its first large-scale exhibition at the TU Delft Library. NanoArt brings the beauty of cleanroom work to the public. This exhibition featured art pieces not only from Laurens and Gerben, but also from QuTech colleagues David van Driel, Figen Yilmaz, Marta Pita Vidal, Nina Codreanu, Nick van Loo and Siddharth Singh.

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Hans defends his PhD successfully

On October 13th 2023, Hans defended his PhD successfully! Congrats, Hans!

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Antoni van Leeuwenhoek lezing in the Delft theatre

​Sjoerd Loenen, PhD student in Taminiau Lab, gave a lecture for Studium Generale in the Delft theatre ‘Theater the Veste’, about the impact and power of quantum technology. See https://sg.tudelft.nl/event/kwantumtechnologie-ongekende-rekenkracht-fascinerende-natuurkunde/ (in Dutch).

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Conor defends his PhD

Conor has defended his PhD and was awarded cum laude. Congrats Conor!!

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Our realisation of a time crystal is published in Science

Researchers from the Taminiau lab at QuTech created a time crystal, a novel exotic quantum phase of matter, using a quantum computer based on diamond. Together with a simultaneous experiment by Google (preprint), the results shed new light on the physics of out-of-equilibrium quantum systems. The team reports their findings today in Science.

Collaboration with Element Six, Francisco Machado and Norman Yao.

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An artist’s impression of the discrete time crystal made at QuTech. A chain of connected spins is locked in a phase where they periodically invert their state. Image credit Joe Randall and Tim Taminiau, QuTech.

Mohamed is awarded a prestigious Rubicon fellowship

​​NWO announced today that QuTech’s Mohamed Abobeih will receive a Rubicon grant. The Rubicon programme gives young, highly promising researchers the opportunity to gain international research experience.

Mohamed will use the fellowship to join the group of Mikhail Lukin at Harvard in the near future.

Congrats Mohamed!

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Maarten successfully defended his PhD thesis

On Monday the 12th of April, Maarten has defended his PhD thesis with great success. Congratulations Maarten and best of luck with your new adventures.

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The committee: Caspar van der Wal, Sander Otte, Ronald Hanson, Yaroslav Blanter and Mete Atature.

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Mohamed graduates!

Today, Mohamed has successfully defended his thesis after a fascinating discussion with his committee. Congratulations to Dr. Mohamed on a job well done!

As you can see on the photos the COVID pandemic changes everything.

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Mohamed getting his diploma!

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The other star of the day: the thesis.

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Dr. Abobeih and the committee. Servaas Kokkelmans*, Christian Degen*, Lieven Vandersypen*, Ronald Hanson*, Gary Steele*, Martin Plenio* and Tim Taminiau. *joined remotely on the screen.

 

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Conor, Mohamed, Joe and Tim celebrating outside after the defence, while keeping 1.5 meters distance.

Kavli Institute of Nanoscience Delft Publication Prize

Our paper on the atomic-scale imaging of a large nuclear spin cluster has been awarded the prestigious and biennial Kavli Delft Publication Prize. Congrats Mohamed, Joe, Conor and all co-authors.

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Launching a research collaboration with Fujitsu

QuTech has launched a research collaboration with Fujitsu to investigate modular optically-connected quantum computation. Teaming up with a partner with a strong expertise in computing and electronics is excepted to accelerate research and create new opportunities for valorisation. The collaboration includes 8 groups within QuTech. See the press release or this story in the Delta for more information.

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Our atomic-scale magnetic imaging is published in Nature

“Researchers at QuTech, a collaboration of TU Delft and TNO, have developed a new magnetic quantum sensing technology that can image samples with atomic-scale resolution. It opens the door towards imaging individual molecules, like proteins and other complex systems, atom by atom. The team reports on their results today in Nature.”

Article in Nature
Press release QuTech
Press release TuDelft

Video explaining the paper

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ERC starting grant

The European Research Council has awarded an ERC Starting Grant to Tim Taminiau. The grant (1.5 million euros for a five-year program) will allow him to pursue ground-breaking ideas for the next generation of quantum computing.

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NWA grant

Our proposal “Quantum microscopy: A new tool for future technologies” has been accepted (NWO website). We will investigate scanning probe magnetic imaging based on defects in diamond with a multi-disciplinary team that includes Toeno van der Sar (Delft), Richard Norte (Delft), Tjerk Oosterkamp (Leiden), TNO, Applied Nanolayers BV and Leiden Spin Imaging BV.

​NWA: Connecting science and society.

The Dutch government has recently increased its investment in research and innovation. Part of this extra funding is intended for the NWA research programme that NWO is realising on behalf of the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science. The overarching aim of this programme is to improve the connection between science and society. The need to structurally strengthen this connection is widely felt and supported. To achieve this aim, the NWA programme will encourage research relevant for society, facilitate knowledge sharing via interdisciplinary and knowledge-chain-wide collaboration, and proactively involve societal partners in the formulation, setting up and realisation of the research. The dialogue between science and society will be further fuelled by targeted communication and outreach activities and by the active involvement of citizens in science and research (e.g. through citizen science and co-creation). In addition, the programme will contribute to the sustainability and innovativeness of routes and networks.­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

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Poster prize!

Mohamed wins the LATSIS2019 diamond photonics poster prize! Congrats! Click here for the corresponding paper.

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Radio interview on NPO1 (Dutch)

Tim gives his take on a recent breakthrough paper on the Dutch radio. Click here for the radio interview. In the paper, published today in Science, the authors demonstrate that single NV centers can be read out through the electrical current they generate. This provides an alternative to the traditional optical readout, with the potential for better integration is small electronics devices. Fun fact: one of the authors is Takashi, who now joined our team at QuTech.

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Minerva prize

​Julia wins the NWO Minerva prize for our error correction paper. Congratulations Julia!

The prize will be given to Julia at the Veldhoven conference.

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Vidi grant

​Our group is awarded a Vidi grant by NWO worth 800 k€ to investigate ​fault-tolerant quantum error correction with spin qubits in diamond. Such fault tolerance is essential for large-scale quantum information processing.

​Here is a list of all the accepted proposals.

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Julia has graduated!

Julia becomes the first PhD graduate of the group. Congratulations Julia!

On the right: Julia, her paranymphs, and the commitee (Fedor Jelezko, Barbara Terhal, Koen Bertels, Lieven Vandersypen, Ronald Hanson and Tim Taminiau).

Below: Julia presenting here work before the PhD defense.

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The Bell paper wins the Ehrenfest prize for Quantum Foundations

Our loophole-free Bell test has been awarded the Ehrenfest Prize for best publication on the foundations of quantum mechanics. Below: Tim receiving the certificate from Caslav Brukner in Vienna.

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Interview with Tim about the Big Bell test in El Periodico

Tim shares his opinion about the upcoming “Big Bell test” in an interview with the major Spanish newspaper. Don’t forget to play the Bell game today and tomorrow (30 November 2017), and see how random you can be!

Quantum Zeno dynamics published

Our paper on protecting logical quantum states in subspaces formed through the quantum Zeno effect is published in Nature Communications. The work explores protecting multiple logical entangled qubits from environmental noise and provides an opportunity to study the interplay between frequent quantum measurement and correlated noise such as non-Markovian noise.

See the press release and these selected news articles (Tweakers, PhysOrg) for more.

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Kavli publication prize 2016

​The Bell paper wins the Kavli publication prize for the best publication of the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience Delft of the last two years. Congratulations Bas and all co-authors!

On the right: Kavli directors Cees Dekker and Lieven Vandersypen hand over the Kavli publication prize to the present authors (left to right: Raymond Schouten, Raymond Vermeulen, Tim Taminiau, Ronald Hanson, Bas Hensen). The prize consists of 3000 Euros and a cool statue.

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Royal attention

​Julia’s excellent paper, cool video and clear explanations on the radio were even noticed by the Dutch royal family, netting her an invitation to a pretty fancy event.

Congratulations Julia!

Oh how difficult it must be to return to doing experiments in a dark laboratory after all this….

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Julia with Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands

Quantum Error Correction published in Nature Communications

Because quantum states are extremely fragile, large-scale quantum information processing is impossible without quantum error correction. In our latest publication in Nature Communications we realize active quantum error correction based on non-destructive measurements and real time feedback. This experiments marks the first time that quantum states are continuously protected by repeatedly detecting errors and actively corrected through classical logic and real time feedback, essential elements of fault-tolerant quantum computations.

​The work was covered by several media, such as the volkskrant, tweakers.net and BNR radio, and even drew the attention of the Dutch royal family! See the videos and cartoon below for a basic explanation of quantum error correction.

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Cartoon version of the experiment. (1) A logical quantum bit is encoded in three physical qubits (nuclear spins). (2) Errors are detected through non-destructive stabilizer measurements using an ancilla qubit (electron spin). (3) Errors are corrected through fast real-time feedback. Steps 2 and 3 are repeated in order to continuously protect the quantum state. Image by Wolfgang Pfaff, edited by Julia Cramer.

 

Video in Dutch and English.

Interview: cover story in SURF magazine about our work

Tim describes our work on quantum computing and quantum networks in a cover story in SURF magazine. Picture

Top 10 scientific breakthrough!

Our loophole-free Bell test was picked as a top 10 scientific breakthrough of 2015 by the magazine Science. Ultimately we lost out on the number 1 spot to CRISPR, the powerful genome editing technique. In the internet voting by the public, the New Horizons missions images of Pluto took first place, with our Bell test coming in 5th!

Just a few days later Nature selected our experiment as one of the science events that shaped 2015!

Our new labs are ready!

The renovation is finished and all three new labs look great (B-56, B-58 and B-60). Next step: constructing the experiments and doing science (after cleaning of course).

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Our main laboratory B-60 (65 m2) is ready to go! (See the bottom of the page for photos before the renovation)

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Lab B-60: other side

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Lab B-60: The climate control system that will keep our experiments stable.

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Lab B-58: our small utility lab (20 m2)

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Lab B-58: other side

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Lab B-56: An extra 50 m2 lab ready for more experiments!

Lab warming party

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The before photos:
We think it is quite an improvement!

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The first loophole-free Bell test

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Our loophole-free Bell test has now been published in Nature. In this experiment performed at the Hanson lab we entangled two nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers in diamonds placed in laboratories on opposite sides of the TU Delft campus (1.3 kilometer). We then used this entanglement to demonstrate a violation of Bell’s inequality. Because the NV center spins were measured with high accuracy and because the complete measurement (choice of measurement basis, spin readout, storage of result in classical electronics) was performed in a time so short that no communication between the labs was possible, the experiment closes all loopholes that were present in previous experiments.

Our results reject the hypothesis that nature obeys the principle of local causality (or local realism), providing the strongest evidence yet that the world is fundamentally non local. The only remaining ways to save the local casual worldview is to invoke that the measurement choice was already determined at an earlier time or that the results stored were still altered after they were saved in the classical computers. Such theories can be further restricted in future experiments – most excitingly by using humans on earth and on the moon/in space to select the measurement settings and record the data – but can never be completely excluded.

The result made quite a splash in the media and was even featured on the cover of the New York Times. A good place to start is the coverage by the economist and two of the features by Nature (first, second).

This experiment was based in the Hanson lab at QuTech and is a collaboration with the groups of Stephanie Wehner (QuTech), Morgan Mitchell (ICFO), Valerio Pruneri (ICFO) and Matthew Markham and Daniel Twitchen (Element Six).

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Our experiment on the cover of the New York Times. The photo shows Bas Hensen and Ronald Hanson at one of the two cryogenic setups used (the other setup is placed at the other side of the campus).

Tim Taminiau is awarded the Fresnel prize for fundamental research

Last week Tim was presented the Fresnel prize during a ceremony at the CLEO in Munich. The Fresnel prize for fundamental research is awarded bi-annually by the European Physical Society to a researcher that made outstanding contributions before the age of 35. Previous recipients include Markus Aspelmeyer, Tobias Kippenberg, Philip Walther and Kjeld Eikema.

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