Jonathan Dowling

For the American football player, see Jonathan Dowling (American football).
Jonathan P. Dowling
Born Smithtown, New York
Residence United States
Nationality Ireland United States
Fields Physicist
Institutions Louisiana State University
Alma mater University of Colorado at Boulder
Doctoral advisor Asim Orhan Barut
Doctoral students Argenis DaSilva, Ryan T. Glasser, Sean D. Huver, Kebei Jiang, Jonathan P. Olson, Stephan J. Olson, William N. Plick, Chris D. Richardson, Kaushik P. Seshadreesan, Bhaskar Roy Bardhan.
Known for Quantum Optics, Quantum technology
Notable awards Willis Lamb Medal, NASA Space Act Award, US Army Research & Development Achievement Award

Jonathan P. Dowling is an Irish-American Co-Director of the Horace Hearne Institute for Theoretical Physics, and also a Hearne Chair in Theoretical Physics at the Department of Physics and Astronomy, both at Louisiana State University. He is known for his work on quantum technology, particularly for exploiting quantum entanglement (in the form of a NOON state) for applications to quantum metrology, quantum sensing, and quantum imaging (particularly as the inventor of quantum lithography). He has also made contributions to quantum information theory, the field of photonic crystals, and the foundations of quantum electrodynamics. Dowling is one of the founders of the US Government program in quantum information processing.

Biography

Jonathan P. Dowling holds dual citizenship from Ireland and the USA. He obtained his BSc in Physics at the University of Texas at Austin, and then attended graduate school at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he obtained a MSc in Applied Mathematics, a MSc in Physics, and finally a PhD in Mathematical Physics; his advisor was Asim Orhan Barut. He then moved to the Max-Planck-Institute of Quantum Optics as a post-doctoral researcher in the group of Herbert Walther where he also collaborated with Marlan Scully. After that, he joined the quantum optics group of Charles M. Bowden at United States Army Aviation and Missile Command in Huntsville, Alabama, as a United States National Research Council Post-Doctoral Research Associate, where he was eventually promoted to Research Physicist of the United States Army Aviation and Missile Research, Development, and Engineering Center. After this, he moved to take a position as Research Scientist at the Senior Level in the Quantum Computing Technologies Group at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where he was promoted to Group Supervisor and Principal Scientist of this JPL group. After this position, he moved to Louisiana State University to take up his current posts there.

Awards and honors

Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science "For discoveries the field of quantum optics." Fellow of the American Physical Society "For major contributions to quantum optics as it pertains to the development of the theory of atomic emission rates and nonlinear switching in photonic crystals, as well as seminal contributions to quantum metrology and imaging, especially the invention of quantum lithography." Fellow of the Optical Society of America For "fundamental contributions to optics in the areas of photonic crystals, quantum imaging, quantum metrology, and optical approaches to quantum information processing, as well as service to the OSA"; Willis E. Lamb Medal for Achievement in Quantum Optics and Laser Science for "Pioneering Contributions to Quantum Electronics and Especially the Study of Spatial Coherence Effects of Multiphoton Entangled States"; NASA Space Act Award for development of "Quantum Interferometric Lithography"; Discover Magazine Technology of the Year Award Semi-finalist for "Invention of Quantum Lithography"; Army Research, Development, & Engineering Achievement Award for "Development of Mathematical Models of Electromagnetic Wave Emission and Propagation in Photonic Band-Gap Materials".

Research

Dowling has authored over 170 scientific publications[1] in quantum electrodynamics, quantum optics, quantum sciences, and quantum technology. His publications have been cited over 8,000 times, with an average number of 50 citations per paper, with a Hirsch index over 43.[2] Over 26 papers have been cited over 100 times each. He also holds seven US Patents. Dowlings's three most-cited research papers are on the topics of quantum lithography,[3] optical switching in photonic crystals,[4] and the photonic band-edge laser.[5] Dowling is also known for a series of papers on the quantum theory of atomic spontaneous emission and other quantum electrodynamics effects in optical micro-cavities and photonic crystals.[6] His recent work has focused on optical quantum computing,[7] as well as quantum metrology, quantum imaging,[8] and quantum sensing[9] – all with the optical NOON state[10] and other related quantum entangled states.

Media

Dowling is the author of a new popular science book, "Schrödinger's Killer App – Race to Build the World's First Quantum Computer," (Taylor & Francis, 2013). "Told from a government insider's point of view, this volume is the fascinating story of the quest to develop a quantum computer. Using non-technical language, amusing personal anecdotes, and easy-to-follow analogies, the book leads us from the beginnings of quantum information technology to the present time."

External links

References

  1. Dowling's Publications and Patents, .
  2. https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=3YObZBIAAAAJ
  3. Phys. Rev. Lett. 85, 2733 (2000) .
  4. Phys. Rev. Lett. 73, 1368 (1994) .
  5. J. App. Phys. 75, 1896 (1994) .
  6. E.g. Phys. Rev. A 46, 612 (1992) .
  7. Rev. Mod. Phys. 79, 135 (2007) .
  8. J. Opt. B 6, S796 (2004) .
  9. Concepts in Physics 2, 225 (2005) .
  10. Dowling, JP. 2008. Quantum optical metrology – the lowdown on high-N00N states. CONTEMPORARY PHYSICS 49 (2): 125–143. .
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