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Dr Joel Corney
Dr

Joel Corney

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53404

Overview

Background

Dr Joel Corney’s research interests are in the fields of quantum physics, ultracold gases, and optics.

He completed his PhD at The University of Queensland in 2000.

His chief research projects are in the areas of: Bose-Einstein Condensation, Quantum Phase-Space Simulation Techniques, Quantum Effects in Optical Fibres, and Nonlinear Optics

Availability

Dr Joel Corney is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Bachelor (Honours) of Science (Advanced), The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy, The University of Queensland

Research interests

  • Quantum chaos and thermalisation

  • Quantum and nonlinear optics

  • Ultracold Atoms

  • Stochastic simulation methods

Works

Search Professor Joel Corney’s works on UQ eSpace

88 works between 1997 and 2024

81 - 88 of 88 works

1999

Conference Publication

Quantum dynamics and coherence properties of evaporatively cooled Bose-Einstein condensates

Drummond, P. D. and Corney, J. (1999). Quantum dynamics and coherence properties of evaporatively cooled Bose-Einstein condensates. Quantum Electronics and Laser Science Conference 1999, Baltimore, USA, 23-28 May, 1999. USA: Optical Society of America, American Physical Society. doi: 10.1109/qels.1999.807139

Quantum dynamics and coherence properties of evaporatively cooled Bose-Einstein condensates

1998

Other Outputs

Homodyne Measurements on a Bose-Einstein Condensate

Corney, J. F. and Milburn, Gerard J. (1998). Homodyne Measurements on a Bose-Einstein Condensate.

Homodyne Measurements on a Bose-Einstein Condensate

1998

Journal Article

Homodyne measurements on a Bose-Einstein condensate

Corney, J. F. and Milburn, G. J. (1998). Homodyne measurements on a Bose-Einstein condensate. Physical Review A, 58 (3), 2399-2406. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.58.2399

Homodyne measurements on a Bose-Einstein condensate

1997

Journal Article

Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate in a double-well potential

Milburn, G. J., Corney, J., Wright, E. M. and Walls, D. F. (1997). Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate in a double-well potential. Physical Review A, 55 (6), 4318-4324. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.55.4318

Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate in a double-well potential

1997

Conference Publication

Raman jitter in terabaud soliton transmission

Corney J.F. and Drummond P.D. (1997). Raman jitter in terabaud soliton transmission. Proceedings of the 1997 Pacific Rim Conference on Lasers and Electro-Optics, CLEO/Pacific Rim, Chiba, Jpn, July 14, 1997-July 18, 1997. doi: 10.1109/cleopr.1997.610527

Raman jitter in terabaud soliton transmission

1997

Conference Publication

Quantum nonlinear dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate

Milburn, G. J., Corney, J. and Harris, D. (1997). Quantum nonlinear dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate.

Quantum nonlinear dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate

1997

Journal Article

Quantum noise limits to terabaud communications

Corney, J. F., Drummond, P. D. and Liebman, A. (1997). Quantum noise limits to terabaud communications. Optics Communications, 140 (4-6), 211-215. doi: 10.1016/S0030-4018(97)00191-0

Quantum noise limits to terabaud communications

1997

Conference Publication

Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate

Milburn, G.J., Corney, J.F., Harris, D., Wright, E.M. and Walls, D.F. (1997). Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate. Atom Optics Conference, San Jose, CA, United States, 10-12 February 1997. Bellingham, WA, United States: S P I E - International Society for Optical Engineering. doi: 10.1117/12.273762

Quantum dynamics of an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate

Funding

Past funding

  • 2019 - 2023
    Inertial sensing with a quantum gas phonon interferometer
    Commonwealth Defence Science and Technology Group
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2009
    Quantum correlations in ultra-cold Fermi gases
    Open grant
  • 2003 - 2010
    ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum-Atom Optics (ANU lead institution)
    ARC Centres of Excellence
    Open grant
  • 2003
    Application of Novel Computational Techniques to Bose-Einstein Condensates in Optical Lattices
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2003
    Quantum Dynamics of Bose - Einstein Condensation
    UQ New Staff Research Start-Up Fund
    Open grant
  • 2002 - 2005
    Quantum dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates of atoms and molecules
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Dr Joel Corney is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Controlled chaos in ultra cold matter systems

    Utracold atoms in optical lattices provide an elegant, reconfigurable arena for exploring many-body quantum physics in a precisely controlled way. In particular they can be used to probe how the features of dynamical chaos (a classical phenomenon of nonlinear systems) survive in the quantum regime. This project will map out the phase-space of novel lattice systems (with enough degrees of freedom to show chaos in the classical limit, yet small enough such that a quantum description is tractable) and map chaotic features onto the Wigner distribution of the corresponding quantum state. A key goal will be to understand the role of apparent chaotic behaviour in the thermalisation of isolated quantum systems. The project will involve a combination of analytic and computational work. Prior computational experience (in any language) would be an advantage.

  • Quantum Squeezing via Self-Induced Transparency

    Optical fibres offer a versatile medium for squeezing the quantum state of light for application in quantum information and communication, and precision metrology. However, the amount and quality of squeezing is limited by interactions with vibrational modes in the silica. A promising alternative is microstructured fibre with a gas-filled hollow core [1]. Here a strong nonlinear response can be provided via self-induced trans- parency, wherein an intense pulse of light is coherently absorbed and then emitted without loss, resulting in the kind of intensity-dependent phase shift required for squeezing.

    In this project, you will develop and implement a realistic computational model of resonant atom-light interaction in this system, including coupling to relevant reservoirs, to make accurate predictions of the amount of squeezing possible. A key aspect of the work is to adapt the quantum noise techniques previously used to successfully predict squeezing in dispersive media [2] to resonant interactions. The results will play a vital role in guiding current and future experiments in quantum squeezing with microstruc- tured fibre.

    [1] Ulrich Vogl, Florian Sedlmeir, Nicolas Y Joly, Christoph Marquardt, and Gerd Leuchs. Generation of non-classical light via self-induced transparency in mercury- filled hollow core photonic crystal fibers. In Frontiers in Optics 2016, 2016.

    [2] Joel F Corney, Joel Heersink, Ruifang Dong, Vincent Josse, Peter D Drummond, Gerd Leuchs, and Ulrik L Andersen. Simulations and experiments on polarization squeezing in optical fiber. Phys. Rev. A, 78(2):23831, 2008.

  • Photons in the Fermi sea

    Novel “epsilon-near-zero” materials, where the electric permittivity vanishes at certain wavelengths, have recently been demonstrated to have very high nonlinear optical response [1], i.e. these materials enable photons effectively to interact with each other. These interactions could be be used to manipulate the intrinsic quantum fluctuations in the light - an effect known as quantum squeezing. Quantum squeezing has applications in precision measurement, quantum information and quantum communication.

    This project will analyse the interaction between photons and degenerate electrons at the quantum level (existing theory so far has just focussed on the classical response), to produce quantitative predictions of the quantum squeezing available in such materials.

    The project will involve a combination of analytic and computational work. Prior computational experience (in any language) would be an advantage. During the project you will have the opportunity to learn the basics of stochastic calculus and how to implement stochastic processes numerically.

    [1] Alam, M. Zahirul, Sebastian A. Schulz, Jeremy Upham, Israel De Leon, and Robert W. Boyd. “Large Optical Nonlinearity of Nanoantennas Coupled to an Epsilon-near-Zero Material” Nature Photonics 12, no. 2 (2018): 79–83. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41566-017-0089-9

  • Squeezing in whispering-gallery-mode resonators

    Nonlinear effects in an optical material can be enhanced through a long interaction length (like an optical fibre) or by use of an optical cavity/resonator (whereby each photon is reflected back through the medium many times before emerging through the mirror).

    Optical resonators formed from microspheres or microdisks support high-quality whispering gallery modes, in which the incoupled light circulates many times in a highly confined space. This project will investigate the use of whispering-gallery-modes for quantum squeezing, calculating the squeezing spectrum that different configurations can generate.

    The project will involve a combination of analytic and computational work. Prior computational experience (in any language) would be an advantage. During the project you will have the opportunity to learn the basics of stochastic calculus and how to implement stochastic processes numerically.

Supervision history

Current supervision

  • Doctor Philosophy

    Adaptive explicitly-correlated Gaussian basis functions for time-dependent quantum systems

    Associate Advisor

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Dr Joel Corney directly for media enquiries about:

  • Atom optics - quantum
  • Optical fibre - quantum effects
  • Physics - quantum
  • Quantum atom optics
  • Quantum effects in optical fibre
  • Quantum physics
  • Quantum simulation methods
  • Ultra cold gases - physics

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