Virginia Lorenz

Virginia Lorenz
Virginia Lorenz
Professor, Physics
(217) 300-3306
337A Loomis Laboratory

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Biography

Professor Virginia (Gina) Lorenz received her B.A. in physics magna cum laude and mathematics in 2001 and completed her Ph.D. in physics in 2007 at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Her thesis work focused on measuring and modelling the transition from reversible to irreversible dephasing of electronic coherence in dense atomic vapors. From 2007-2009 she was a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Atomic and Laser Physics at the University of Oxford, where she worked on implementations of quantum memories in atomic and solid-state systems. From 2009-2014, she was an assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Delaware. She joined the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2015, where her research group performs experiments in quantum optics, atomic and molecular spectroscopy, and optical magnetometry. In 2023 her research group, in collaboration with the group of Paul Kwiat and university and community partners, launched the first publicly accessible quantum network.

Research Statement

Professor Lorenz's research group currently focuses on a variety of areas in quantum optics: quantum networks, quantum memories, photonic quantum sources, quantum sensing.

Public Quantum Network

On November 4, 2023, in collaboration with other research teams and university and community partners, we launched the first publicly accessible quantum network. There is now a permanent installation at The Urbana Free Library where the public can interact for themselves with quantum technology, to both learn the principles on which such technology is based and contribute to its formation. See the Public Quantum Network website for more information.

Photonic quantum state characterization and engineering

The ability to create and control quantum states of light is important for quantum computation and quantum communication applications. We are exploring the use of standard, commercially available polarization-maintaining fiber (PMF) as a simple source of photon-pairs. PMF is an efficient generator of photon pairs and its large birefringence yields a 60 THz detuning of the photon' phase-matched wavelengths from the pump, thus almost eliminating contamination due to photons produced from Raman scattering, which is an issue in other types of fiber sources. The joint spectral properties of the photon pair can be tailored by an appropriate choice of pump bandwidth and fiber length. We develop new characterization methods as well as sources entangled in new degrees of freedom in optical fiber.

Generation, storage and retrieval of THz bandwidth quantum states

An essential capability for quantum computation and quantum communication is the synchronization of multiple sub-device elements, which requires a so-called quantum memory to store and retrieve information carried by photons. We are applying an off-resonance Raman protocol in atomic barium vapor to store and retrieve THz bandwidth quantum states. The broad bandwidth of the involved fields permits the characterization and optimization of storage and retrieval using spectral shaping, and enables us to study the spectral properties of nonclassical correlations between the photons and the excitations in the atomic ensemble. Barium has a strong transition at the fortuitous wavelength of 1500 nm, meaning it can store telecom wavelength photons directly.

Quantum sensing of astronomical objects

We study quantum information theory to better understand and predict the limitations of imaging techniques in a wide range of applications. We are exploring the potential for quantum advantage in the field of interferometric astronomy, including both quantum estimation theory approaches and table-top experiments.

Selected Articles in Journals

Research Honors

  • Dean's Award for Excellence in Research (2020)

Recent Courses Taught

  • PHYS 403 - Modern Experimental Physics