Qualifications
Dipl. Phys. (Kaiserslautern); Dr. rer. nat. (Kaiserslautern); Habilitation (TU München)
Academic background
I graduated in physics at the University of Kaiserslautern in 1990, completing my doctoral studies in 1995. With a Feodor-Lynen fellowship of the Alexander-von-Humboldt foundation, I concentrated on laser cooling as a post-doctoral research assistant with Professor Cohen-Tannoudji at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris.
In 1998, I joined Professor Rempe's team at the University of Konstanz, and one year later I moved with my team to the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching. During this time, I focused on quantum information processing with single atoms and photons.
In 2005, I qualified as a university professor at TU München. I joined the University of Oxford as a lecturer in experimental physics one year later. My research team at the Clarendon Laboratory is now investigating atom–photon connections.
Undergraduate teaching
I teach the courses Atom and Laser Physics, Optics, Quantum Optics, Quantum Mechanics, and Quantum Information Technology.
Research interests
My research focuses on the ultimate control of atom–photon interactions at the single-atom and single-photon level. My team brings quantum mechanics to work –
Featured publications
Many of my publications are listed on my departmental profile.
Other interests and activities
I love to be with our four children, which is often more challenging than the management of a small research team. There's only a little time left, which I use for cycling, biking, skiing and photographing.