Welcome to Rémy, Julius and Marco

From left to right: Rémy Dolbeault, Julius Franze and Marco Lucibello.

At the beginning of March, we welcomed three Masters’ interns to the 3 experimental labs! Rémy Dolbeault, Julius Franze and Marco Lucibello will be working in the Erbium, Er-Dy and T-REQS labs respectively for the next few months.

Rémy was born the 19th of March 2001 in Paris, and went to Lyon for his studies. He discovered the cold atom field thanks to a talk given at the school which completely caught his attention. He then went to Florence, Italy to do a 1st Master internship on vortices in the BEC-BCS crossover in Li-6, which confirmed his interest in this field of Physics. For the 2nd Master’s intership, he will spend five months in the Erbium Lab working on superradiance and superresolution.

Julius born on the 10th of January 2003 in Dessau-Roßlau, Germany. He did his Bachelors at Leipzig University with a focus on Plasma physics, and will now work with the Erbium-Dysprosium Lab for his internship.

Marco was born on October 13, 2001, and graduated in Physics in 2023 in Roma Tre University, with a thesis on “Entanglement and GHZ states.” He is currently enrolled at Roma Tre University for his Master’s degree, and will be working with the T-REQS Lab for his internship.

Welcome to the group Rémy, Julius and Marco!🥳

Goodbye to Ferdinand

We bid goodbye to Ferdinand Claude at the end of June 2024! Dr. Claude joined the Erbium team as Post-doc at the end of 2022, and will be moving to the MajuLab in Singapore as a research fellow. Good luck at your new position, Ferdinand!

 

Goodbye to Amal

We bade farewell to Amal El Arrach on the 15th of April 2024, when she defended her master thesis – congratulations! Amal conducted her research in the T-REQS lab, which she joined in the Fall of 2020.

 

 

Goodbye to Simon

Goodbye and congratulations to Simon Gschwendtner for defending his master thesis on the 5th of April 2024! Simon was a part of the Erbium lab and also did some theoretical work for his thesis, “Bloch oscillations in a dipolar quantum gas and setup of a 631nm laser system for spin manipulation of erbium atoms” supervised by Dr. Manfred Mark. Congratulations on officially being a Master of Science!

 

 Thesis defense of Simon G