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Professor Karen Kheruntsyan
Professor

Karen Kheruntsyan

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 336 53420

Overview

Background

Professor Kheruntsyan graduated from the Yerevan State University (Armenia, former Soviet Union) in 1988, and received PhD degree in Physics from the Institute for Physical Research of the Armenian Academy of Science in 1993. In 1996, he moved to the University of Queensland to work as a postdoctoral research associate and was subsequently awarded a UQ Postdoctoral Research Fellowship. Following this, he held positions of Lecturer, ARC Senior Research Fellow, Chief Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum-Atom Optics (2003-2010), ARC Future Fellow (2010-2014), Associate Professor (2015-2017), and is currently Professor in theoretical physics in the School of Mathematics and Physics (SMP).

Availability

Professor Karen Kheruntsyan is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Fields of research

Qualifications

  • Masters (Coursework), Yerevan State University
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Institution to be confirmed

Research interests

  • Quantum thermodynamics of ultracold atomic gases

    The Second Quantum Revolution is currently underway, and represents the merging of thermodynamic concepts of heat and work, born during the Industrial Revolution, with quantum concepts of information processing and entanglement. But how do the classical ideas on the nature of heat and work translate to quantum devices? Do the laws of classical thermodynamics also dictate the behaviour of processes at a quantum level, or whether new laws are needed? The project intends to shed light on these fundamental questions by developing state-of-the-art computational models of quantum-scale machines and heat engines using the platform of ultracold atomic gases. Such gases represent arcehtypical examples of interacting many-body systems, however, characterising their equilibrium and nonequilibrium properties is a chellenging problem. The knowledge arising from the project is expected to underpin experimental breakthroughs in this emerging field and aid the development of new quantum technologies.

  • Stochastic quantum hydrodynamics: a new theoretical approach to nonequilibrium dynamics of quantum many-body systems

    The project aims to develop a new theoretical approach – stochastic quantum hydrodynamics – to understand one of the grand challenges of physics: how do complex, many-particle systems evolve in the quantum realm when driven far from equilibrium? Understanding the out-of-equilibrium behaviour of such systems will help shape a new cornerstone of physics, nonequilibrium statistical mechanics, which – unlike its equilibrium counterpart – is a work in progress in modern science. The project intends to uncover the intriguing dynamical properties of superfluid (frictionless) states of ultracold atomic gases, which will help understand how these properties can be used to control quantum matter and develop new quantum technologies.

  • Emergent physics in quantum transport in ultracold atomic gases

    The project seeks to understand an open fundamental problem in physics: How do complex microscopic interactions in many-particle systems lead to the emergence of a qualitatively new behavior and to the formation of new states of quantum matter? We will investigate this problem in the context of quantum transport in mesoscopic (with mésos meaning “middle” in Greek) systems made of minimally complex, but highly controllable and well-characterised ensembles of ultracold atomic gases. Such gases, when cooled down to temperatures of just a few nanokelvin above absolute zero, form exotic states of quantum matter such as Bose-Einstein condensates and degenerate Fermi gases, enabling the study of a wide range of phenomena in quantum many-body physics. By developing new theories of quantum transport in mesoscopic condensates, we will shed light on the laws of emergence at the mesoscale and help close the gap in our understanding of what lies in between quantum and classical, simple and complex, and isolated and interacting. Apart from being a fundamental problem, understanding quantum transport and the laws of emergence at the mesoscale has potential practical applications such as bottom-up fabrication of novel materials with new functionality.

  • Macroscopic entanglement and Bell inequality tests with ultra-cold atoms

    The project addresses an open fundamental question in physics of how quantum mechanics applies to systems of mesoscopic and macroscopic sizes. The project will provide theoretical guidance to Australia’s research effort to experimentally demonstrate - for the first time - quantum entanglement between large, spatially separated ensembles of ultracold atoms. Apart from being of quintessential importance to validating some of the foundational principles of quantum mechanics in new realms, controlled generation of large-scale entangled systems is important for harnessing such systems for the development of future quantum devices, as well as for enabling new insights into the unification of quantum theory with gravity.

Works

Search Professor Karen Kheruntsyan’s works on UQ eSpace

119 works between 1990 and 2024

41 - 60 of 119 works

2011

Journal Article

Sub-Poissonian fluctuations in a 1D Bose gas: From the quantum quasicondensate to the strongly interacting regime

Jacqmin, Thibaut, Armijo, Julien, Berrada, Tarik, Kheruntsyan, Karen V. and Bouchoule, Isabelle (2011). Sub-Poissonian fluctuations in a 1D Bose gas: From the quantum quasicondensate to the strongly interacting regime. Physical Review Letters, 106 (23) 230405, 230405-1-230405-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.230405

Sub-Poissonian fluctuations in a 1D Bose gas: From the quantum quasicondensate to the strongly interacting regime

2011

Journal Article

Mapping out the quasicondensate transition through the dimensional crossover from one to three dimensions

Armijo, J., Jacqmin, T., Kheruntsyan, K. and Bouchoule, I. (2011). Mapping out the quasicondensate transition through the dimensional crossover from one to three dimensions. Physical Review A, 83 (2) 021605, 1-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.83.021605

Mapping out the quasicondensate transition through the dimensional crossover from one to three dimensions

2011

Conference Publication

Sub-poissonian fluctuations in a 1D bose gas: From quantum quasi-condensate to the strongly interacting regime

Kheruntsyan, K. V., Jacqmin, T., Armijo, J., Berrada, T. and Bouchoule, I. (2011). Sub-poissonian fluctuations in a 1D bose gas: From quantum quasi-condensate to the strongly interacting regime. International Quantum Electronics Conference, IQEC 2011, Sydney, Australia, 28 August - 1 September 2011. Washington, DC, United States: OSA—The Optical Society.

Sub-poissonian fluctuations in a 1D bose gas: From quantum quasi-condensate to the strongly interacting regime

2010

Journal Article

Probing three-body correlations in a quantum gas using the measurement of the third moment of density fluctuations

Armijo, J., Jacqmin, T., Kheruntsyan, K.V. and Bouchoule, I. (2010). Probing three-body correlations in a quantum gas using the measurement of the third moment of density fluctuations. Physical Review Letters, 105 (23) 230402, 230402-1-230402-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.230402

Probing three-body correlations in a quantum gas using the measurement of the third moment of density fluctuations

2010

Journal Article

Sub-poissonian number differences in four-wave mixing of matter waves

Jaskula, J. -C., Bonneau, M., Partridge, G. B., Krachmalnicoff, V., Deuar, P., Kheruntsyan, K. V., Aspect, A., Boiron, D. and Westbrook, C. I. (2010). Sub-poissonian number differences in four-wave mixing of matter waves. Physical Review Letters, 105 (19) 190402, 19402-1-19402-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.105.190402

Sub-poissonian number differences in four-wave mixing of matter waves

2010

Journal Article

First-principles quantum dynamics for fermions: Application to molecular dissociation

Ogren, M., Kheruntsyan, K.V. and Corney, J.F. (2010). First-principles quantum dynamics for fermions: Application to molecular dissociation. Europhysics Letters, 92 (3) 36003, 36003-1-36003-6. doi: 10.1209/0295-5075/92/36003

First-principles quantum dynamics for fermions: Application to molecular dissociation

2010

Journal Article

Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates

Ogren, Mangus and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2010). Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates. Physical Review A, 82 (1) 013641, 1-21. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.82.013641

Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates

2010

Journal Article

Spontaneous four-wave mixing of de Broglie waves: Beyond optics

Krachmalnicoff, V., Jaskula, J.-C., Bonneau, M., Leung, V., Partridge, G. B., Boiron, D., Westbrook, C. I., Deuar, P., Zín, P., Trippenbach, M. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2010). Spontaneous four-wave mixing of de Broglie waves: Beyond optics. Physical Review Letters, 104 (15) 150402, 150402-1-150402-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.104.150402

Spontaneous four-wave mixing of de Broglie waves: Beyond optics

2009

Journal Article

Comparative study of dynamical simulation methods for the dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates

Midgley, S. L. W., Wüster, S., Olsen, M. K., Davis, M. J. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2009). Comparative study of dynamical simulation methods for the dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates. Physical Review A, 79 (5) 053632, 053632-1-053632-10. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.79.053632

Comparative study of dynamical simulation methods for the dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates

2009

Journal Article

Directional effects due to quantum statistics in dissociation of elongated molecular condensates

Ogren, Magnus, Savage, C. M. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2009). Directional effects due to quantum statistics in dissociation of elongated molecular condensates. Physical Review A: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, 79 (4) 043624, 043624-1-043624-6. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.79.043624

Directional effects due to quantum statistics in dissociation of elongated molecular condensates

2009

Journal Article

Nonlocal pair correlations in the one-dimensional Bose gas at finite temperature

Deuar, P., Sykes, A. G., Gangardt, D. M., Davis, M. J., Drummond, P. D. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2009). Nonlocal pair correlations in the one-dimensional Bose gas at finite temperature. Physical Review A, 79 (4) 043619, 043619-1-043619-20. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.79.043619

Nonlocal pair correlations in the one-dimensional Bose gas at finite temperature

2009

Journal Article

Atom-atom correlations in colliding Bose-Einstein condensates

Ogren, Magnus and Kheruntsyan, K. V (2009). Atom-atom correlations in colliding Bose-Einstein condensates. Physical Review A, 79 (2) 021606, 021606-1-021606-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.79.021606

Atom-atom correlations in colliding Bose-Einstein condensates

2009

Conference Publication

Exact quantum dynamics of the dissociation of molecular BEC into fermionic atoms

Ogren, Magnus, Kheruntsyan, Karen and Corney, Joel (2009). Exact quantum dynamics of the dissociation of molecular BEC into fermionic atoms. ACOLS ACOFT 09, The University of Adelaide, 29/11/09 - 3/12/09. South Australia: The University of Adelaide.

Exact quantum dynamics of the dissociation of molecular BEC into fermionic atoms

2009

Conference Publication

Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates

Ogren, Magnus and Kheruntsyan, Karen (2009). Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates. ACOLS ACOFT 09, The University of Adelaide, 29/11/09 - 3/12/09. South Australia: The University of Adelaide.

Role of spatial inhomogeneity in dissociation of trapped molecular condensates

2009

Conference Publication

Collisions of Bose-Einstein condensates of metastable helium: recent results

Krachmalnicoff, Valentina, Jaksula, Jean-Christophe, Partridge, Guthrie, Bonneau, Marie, Boiron, Denis, Westbrook, Chris, Deuar, Piotr and Kheruntsyan, Karen (2009). Collisions of Bose-Einstein condensates of metastable helium: recent results. ACOLS ACOFT 09, The University of Adelaide, 29/11/09 - 3/12/09. South Australia: The University of Adelaide.

Collisions of Bose-Einstein condensates of metastable helium: recent results

2008

Journal Article

Atom-atom correlations and relative number squeezing in dissociation of spatially inhomogeneous molecular condensates

Ögren, Magnus and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2008). Atom-atom correlations and relative number squeezing in dissociation of spatially inhomogeneous molecular condensates. Physical Review A: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, 78 (1) 011602, 011602.1-011602.4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.78.011602

Atom-atom correlations and relative number squeezing in dissociation of spatially inhomogeneous molecular condensates

2008

Journal Article

Atomic four-wave mixing via condensate collisions

Perrin, A., Savage, C. M., Boiron, D., Krachmalnicoff, V., Westbrook, C. I. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2008). Atomic four-wave mixing via condensate collisions. New Journal of Physics, 10 (4) 045021, Article Number: 045021. doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/10/4/045021

Atomic four-wave mixing via condensate collisions

2008

Journal Article

Spatial nonlocal pair correlations in a repulsive 1D Bose gas

Sykes, A. G., Gangardt, D. M., Davis, M. J., Viering, K., Raizen, M. G. and Kheruntsyan, K. V. (2008). Spatial nonlocal pair correlations in a repulsive 1D Bose gas. Physical Review Letters, 100 (16) 160406, 160406-1-160406-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.100.160406

Spatial nonlocal pair correlations in a repulsive 1D Bose gas

2008

Journal Article

Yang-Yang thermodynamics on an atom chip

van Amerongen, A. H., van Es, J. J. P., Wicke, P., Kheruntsyan, K. V. and van Druten, N. J. (2008). Yang-Yang thermodynamics on an atom chip. Physical Review Letters, 100 (9) 090402, 090402-1-090402-4. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.100.090402

Yang-Yang thermodynamics on an atom chip

2008

Journal Article

Pairing mean-field theory for the dynamics of dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates.

Davis, M. J., Thwaite, S. J., Olsen, M. K. and Kheruntsyan, K. V (2008). Pairing mean-field theory for the dynamics of dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates.. Physical Review A (Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics), 77 (2) 023617, 023617-1-023617-16. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevA.77.023617

Pairing mean-field theory for the dynamics of dissociation of molecular Bose-Einstein condensates.

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2026
    Hydrodynamics of quantum fluids
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2019 - 2023
    Quantum thermodynamics of ultra-cold atoms
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2022
    Quantum matter far-from-equilibrium
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2016
    Advanced Superfluid Physics Facility
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2015
    Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen entanglement in ultracold atomic gases
    Go8 Australia - Germany Joint Research Co-operation Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2016
    Emergent physics in quantum transport with ultracold atoms
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Quantum nonlocality tests with ultracold atoms (ARC Discovery Project administered by ANU)
    Australian National University
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2014
    Fundamental tests of quantum mechanics with ultracold atomic gases
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    Quantum Equilibration
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2013
    ResTeach 2011 0.05 FTE School of Mathematics and Physics
    UQ ResTeach
    Open grant
  • 2006 - 2009
    Quantum correlations in ultra-cold Fermi gases
    Open grant
  • 2004
    Quantum Many-Body Systems Network: Breakthrough Science and Frontier Technologies
    ARC Seed Funding for Research Networks
    Open grant
  • 2003 - 2010
    ARC Centre of Excellence for Quantum-Atom Optics (ANU lead institution)
    ARC Centres of Excellence
    Open grant
  • 2002
    Quantum correlations in degenerate Bose gases
    University of Queensland Research Development Grants Scheme
    Open grant
  • 2001
    Prospects for superchemistry: Non-linear mater-wave optics with interacting atomic and molecular quantum gases.
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2000
    Coherent Bosonization in Quantum Fermi Gases.
    ARC Australian Research Council (Small grants)
    Open grant
  • 1999
    Vortices and solitons in Bose-Einstein condensates
    ARC Australian Research Council (Small grants)
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Karen Kheruntsyan is:
Available for supervision

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

Available projects

  • Quantum thermodynamics of ultracold atomic gases

    The Second Quantum Revolution is currently underway, and represents the merging of thermodynamic concepts of heat and work, born during the Industrial Revolution, with quantum concepts of information processing and entanglement. But how do the classical ideas on the nature of heat and work translate to quantum devices? Do the laws of classical thermodynamics also dictate the behaviour of processes at a quantum level, or whether new laws are needed? The project intends to shed light on these fundamental questions by developing state-of-the-art computational models of quantum-scale machines and heat engines using the platform of ultracold atomic gases. Such gases represent arcehtypical examples of interacting many-body systems, however, characterising their equilibrium and nonequilibrium properties is a chellenging problem. The knowledge arising from the project is expected to underpin experimental breakthroughs in this emerging field and aid the development of new quantum technologies.

  • Stochastic quantum hydrodynamics: a new theoretical approach to nonequilibrium dynamics of quantum many-body systems

    The project aims to develop theoretical tools to model and understand out-of-equilibrium behaviour of quantum fluids. Such fluids are formed in interacting many-particle systems at ultra-low temperatures, and understanding how these complex systems evolve dynamically when driven out of equilibrium remains a grand-challenge of modern quantum physics. The project intends to study the intriguing dynamical properties of quantum fluids formed by ultra-cold atomic gases, in particular, by atomic Bose and Fermi gases in one-dimensional (1D) waveguides. In such 1D waveguides, and more generally in systems of reduced dimensionality, the effects of quantum and thermal fluctuations are enhanced, compared to three-dimensional systems. As such, theoretical modelling of these systems confronts the challenges of quantum many-body physics heads on. Systems of reduced dimensionality are expected to play an increasingly important role in future quantum technologies, with its ever evolving trend in miniaturisation of electronic devices and precision measurement instruments. The expected outcomes of the project are the knowledge and theoretical tools required to underpin advances in quantum engineering applications, such as the design of quantum heat engines, the control of heat conduction in quantum nanowires and carbon nanotubes, and the fabrication of new energy-efficient materials. Specific sub-projects include:

    • Development of new hydrodynamic theories of 1D quantum fluids at Euler and Navier-Stokes scales
    • Whitlam modulation theory for propagation of 1D quantum shock waves
    • Collective modes of 1D quantum fluids from the theory of Generalised Hydrodynamics (GHD)
    • Quantum transport in 1D quantum fluids
    • Quantum heat engines with ultra-cold atomic gases

  • Macroscopic entanglement and Bell inequality tests with ultracold atoms

    The project addresses an open fundamental question in physics of how quantum mechanics applies to systems of mesoscopic and macroscopic sizes. The project will provide theoretical guidance to Australia’s research effort to experimentally demonstrate - for the first time - quantum entanglement between large, spatially separated ensembles of ultracold atoms. Apart from being of quintessential importance to validating some of the foundational principles of quantum mechanics in new realms, controlled generation of large-scale entangled systems is important for harnessing such systems for the development of future quantum devices, as well as for enabling new insights into the unification of quantum theory with gravity.

  • Macroscopic entanglement and Bell inequality tests with ultra-cold atoms

    The project addresses an open fundamental question in physics of how quantum mechanics applies to systems of mesoscopic and macroscopic sizes. The project will provide theoretical guidance to Australia’s research effort to experimentally demonstrate - for the first time - quantum entanglement between large, spatially separated ensembles of ultracold atoms. Apart from being of quintessential importance to validating some of the foundational principles of quantum mechanics in new realms, controlled generation of large-scale entangled systems is important for harnessing such systems for the development of future quantum devices, as well as for enabling new insights into the unification of quantum theory with gravity.

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Karen Kheruntsyan directly for media enquiries about:

  • Atom Optcis
  • Bose-Einstein Condensates
  • Degenerate Fermi Gases
  • Degenerate Quantum Gases and Atom Optics
  • Foundational Tests of Quantum Mechanics
  • Physics of Matter Waves
  • Quantum Optics
  • Ultracold Molecules

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