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Exploring Ultracold Matter along the Complexity Axis — NSF Award to University of Colorado at Boulder (CO, $298,778)

The science of ultracold atoms and molecules is vigorously pursued for applications to both fundamental physics, such as searches for physics beyond the Standard Model, and for technology, such as quantum computing. Underlying these applications is the basic fact that the samples produced, typically still gaseous even

Award titleExploring Ultracold Matter along the Complexity Axis
Award ID2408636
AwardeeUniversity of Colorado at Boulder
CityBOULDER
StateCO
Amount obligated$298,778
Principal investigatorJohn Bohn
ProgramAMO Theory/Atomic, Molecular &
Start date09/01/2024
AbstractThe science of ultracold atoms and molecules is vigorously pursued for applications to both fundamental physics, such as searches for physics beyond the Standard Model, and for technology, such as quantum computing. Underlying these applications is the basic fact that the samples produced, typically still gaseous even at temperatures just above absolute zero, represent a new kind of physical substance. For example, imagine a gas, quite unlike ordinary air, where sound travels at different speeds
SourceNSF Awards

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