I am fortunate to be able to collaborate with some of the world's most creative and prolific physicists, cosmologists, astronomers and engineers. Our research group is located at SLAC National Laboratory, and collaborates seamlessly with scientists in the Stanford CMB constellation. We also collaborate closely with NIST Boulder's Quantum Sensors Group. We're increasingly also collaborating with SLAC's low-mass dark matter and quantum information sensing groups. Most of our work occurs in large scientific collaborations, and I am a senior member of the BICEP, South Pole Observatory, Simons Observatory, and CMB-S4 science collaborations. In the past, I have worked with the CDMS-II and SPT-3G collaborations. I am currently exploring research opportunities with the ADMX collaboration.
Toby Satterthwaite, graduate student
Brianna Cantrall, graduate student
Tristan Pinsonneault-Marotte, postdoctoral scholar
Frank Qu, KIPAC fellow (incoming)
Federico Bianchini, Research Scientist
Cheng Zhang, Porat Fellow
David Goldfinger, Technical Staff, MIT Lincoln Lab
Cyndia Yu, Maria Goeppert Mayer Fellow, Argonne National Laboratory and University of Chicago
Max Silva-Feaver, Yale Mossman Fellow, Yale University
Prakamya Agrawal, graduate Student, UCSD
Ari Cukierman, postdoc at Caltech
Ed Young, Head of Software and Electronics at Charm Industrial
We have a broad scientific program spanning superconducting device physics, through experiment design, data collection as well as modeling, analysis and simulations to extract physics and cosmology results from data. Undergraduate students are encouraged to reach out to discuss summer research projects; we work with the Stanford's undergraduate research program and DOE SULI (for non-Stanford students) to find students. Admitted graduate students at Stanford University are encouraged to reach out by email to inquire about potential rotation projects. Prospective postdoctoral candidates are welcome to seek research opportunities in our group by email as well.