Chinese-American physicist
NIST physicist Jun Ye adjusts the laser setup for a strontium atomic clock in his laboratory at JILA in 2009.
Jun Ye (Chinese : 叶军 ; pinyin : Yè Jūn ; born 1967) is a Chinese-American physicist at JILA , National Institute of Standards and Technology , and the University of Colorado Boulder , working primarily in the field of atomic, molecular, and optical physics .
Education and career
Ye was born in Shanghai, China, shortly after the beginning of the Cultural Revolution . His father was a naval officer and his mother an environmental scientist. He was primarily raised by his grandmother.[ 1] Ye graduated with a bachelor's degree in physics from Shanghai Jiao Tong University in 1989. He then moved to the United States to commence graduate studies, completing a master's degree at the University of New Mexico under Marlan Scully in theoretical quantum optics in 1991. He also gained experience in experimental physics under John McInerney working on semiconductor lasers , and spent a summer at the Los Alamos National Laboratory .[ 1]
Ye then went to the University of Colorado Boulder to begin a Ph.D. in physics. He was accepted as the last graduate student of eventual Nobel Prize laureate John L. Hall . His thesis was on high-resolution and high-sensitivity molecular spectroscopy , which he completed in 1997.[ 2] He then moved to California Institute of Technology as a Milikan Postdoctoral Fellow, working under Jeff Kimble .[ 3]
Ye moved back to Boulder and JILA as a JILA Associate Fellow and NIST physicist in 1999. John Hall donated most of his lab space to him.[ 1] He was promoted to full Fellow in 2001 and has been there since, establishing a research program in AMO physics and precision measurement .[ 4]
Research
Ye's research focuses on ultracold atoms , ultracold molecules, and laser-based precision measurement. In 2018 JILA reported that the 3D quantum gas clock reached a frequency precision of 2.5 × 10−19 over 6 hours.[ 5]
Such clocks could potentially be used for research into variations in the Earth's gravitational field , searching for particles of dark matter , performing quantum simulations of many-body physics , and investigating the fundamental nature of light and matter .[ 6] [ 7] He also conducts research on strontium for experiments in quantum information science (collaborating with Mikhail Lukin , Ana Maria Rey , Peter Zoller , and others).[ 8]
Popularization of science
Ye appeared in the 2018 Netflix documentary The Most Unknown [ 9] on scientific research directed by Ian Cheney .
Honors and awards
Ye has received numerous awards in the field of science, particularly AMO physics. These include:
In 2015, President Obama selected Jun Ye to receive a Presidential Rank Award for “sustained extraordinary accomplishment”, citing his work advancing "the frontier of light-matter interaction and focusing on precision measurement, quantum physics and ultracold matter, optical frequency metrology, and ultrafast science."[ 24] He was elected a Fellow of the American Physical Society [ 25] and a Fellow of the Optical Society of America . In 2011 he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences ,[ 26] and also named a Frew Fellow from the Australian Academy of Science . In 2017, Ye was elected as a foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences .[ 27]
He is one of the most highly cited researchers in experimental atomic physics in the world, having according to Google Scholar a h-index of 120 (As of 2022[update] )[ 28] and being regularly named as a Thomson-Reuters (ISI ) Highly Cited Researcher.[ 29]
Ye also holds four U.S. Patents for frequency combs and laser technology.
References
^ a b c "Jun Ye | JILA Science" . jila.colorado.edu . Archived from the original on June 15, 2017. Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "John Hall's JILA Home Page" . jila.colorado.edu . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Quantum Optics: Past Members" . quantumoptics.caltech.edu . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Ye Group" . jilawww.colorado.edu . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ Laura Ost (March 5, 2018). "JILA Team Invents New Way to 'See' the Quantum World" . JILA . Retrieved March 30, 2017 .
^ "About Time | JILA Science" . jila.colorado.edu . Archived from the original on September 19, 2015. Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "The most accurate clock ever built only loses one second every 15 billion years" . The Verge . April 22, 2015. Retrieved November 26, 2015 .
^ "Research | Ye Group" . jilawww.colorado.edu . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "The Most Unknown (2018) - IMDb" . www.imdb.com . Retrieved June 9, 2021 .
^ "GW News Center" . www.gwu.edu . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Profile: Prof. Dr. Jun Ye" . www.humboldt-foundation.de . Retrieved November 1, 2023 .
^ "William F. Meggers Award – Awards – OSA.org | The Optical Society" . www.osa.org . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Carl Zeiss Research Award" . www.zeiss.com . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Prize Recipient" . www.aps.org . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Fifty-Third Annual Honor Awards Program" (PDF) . US Department of Commerce – Office of Human Resources Management . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ NIST, US Department of Commerce (December 7, 2011). "National Institute of Standards and Technology Recognizes Staff" . www.nist.gov . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "2019 - Gold Medal Award---Kyle Beloy, David Hume, David Leibrandt, Andrew Ludlow, Nathan Newbury, Jeffrey Sherman, Laura Sinclair, William Swann, Jun Ye" . NIST . November 14, 2019.
^ "2022 - Gold Medal Award---Jun Ye" . NIST . December 22, 2022.
^ NIST, US Department of Commerce (December 10, 2014). "National Institute of Standards and Technology Presents 2014 Awards to Outstanding Employees" . www.nist.gov . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "Norman F. Ramsey Prize in Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, and in Precision Tests of Fundamental Laws and Symmetries" . www.aps.org . Retrieved October 25, 2018 .
^ "Winners of the 2022 Breakthrough Prizes in life sciences, fundamental physics and mathematics announced" . Retrieved September 9, 2020 .
^ "Dr Jun Ye receives the 2021 Julius Springer Prize for Applied Physics" . www.springer.com . Retrieved November 1, 2023 .
^ "Jun Ye Named 2022 Herbert Walther Award Recipient | Optica" . www.optica.org . Retrieved August 12, 2024 .
^ "Jun Ye Selected for 2015 Presidential Rank Award | JILA Science" . jilawww.colorado.edu . Retrieved December 20, 2015 .
^ "APS Fellow Archive" . www.aps.org . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ NIST, US Department of Commerce (May 10, 2011). "NIST/JILA Physicist Jun Ye Elected to National Academy of Sciences" . www.nist.gov . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
^ "关于公布2017年中国科学院院士增选当选院士名单的公告" (in Chinese). Chinese Academy of Sciences. November 28, 2017. Retrieved November 22, 2019 .
^ Jun Ye publications indexed by Google Scholar
^ "Home | Highly Cited Researchers" . Highly Cited Researchers . Retrieved November 25, 2015 .
Mathematics Fundamental physics
Nima Arkani-Hamed , Alan Guth , Alexei Kitaev , Maxim Kontsevich , Andrei Linde , Juan Maldacena , Nathan Seiberg , Ashoke Sen , Edward Witten (2012)
Special : Stephen Hawking , Peter Jenni , Fabiola Gianotti (ATLAS), Michel Della Negra , Tejinder Virdee , Guido Tonelli , Joseph Incandela (CMS) and Lyn Evans (LHC) (2013)
Alexander Polyakov (2013)
Michael Green and John Henry Schwarz (2014)
Saul Perlmutter and members of the Supernova Cosmology Project ; Brian Schmidt , Adam Riess and members of the High-Z Supernova Team (2015)
Special : Ronald Drever , Kip Thorne , Rainer Weiss and contributors to LIGO project (2016)
Yifang Wang , Kam-Biu Luk and the Daya Bay team , Atsuto Suzuki and the KamLAND team, Kōichirō Nishikawa and the K2K / T2K team, Arthur B. McDonald and the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory team, Takaaki Kajita and Yōichirō Suzuki and the Super-Kamiokande team (2016)
Joseph Polchinski , Andrew Strominger , Cumrun Vafa (2017)
Charles L. Bennett , Gary Hinshaw , Norman Jarosik , Lyman Page Jr. , David Spergel (2018)
Special : Jocelyn Bell Burnell (2018)
Charles Kane and Eugene Mele (2019)
Special : Sergio Ferrara , Daniel Z. Freedman , Peter van Nieuwenhuizen (2019)
The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration (2020)
Eric Adelberger , Jens H. Gundlach and Blayne Heckel (2021)
Special : Steven Weinberg (2021)
Hidetoshi Katori and Jun Ye (2022)
Charles H. Bennett , Gilles Brassard , David Deutsch , Peter W. Shor (2023)
John Cardy and Alexander Zamolodchikov (2024)
Life sciences
Cornelia Bargmann , David Botstein , Lewis C. Cantley , Hans Clevers , Titia de Lange , Napoleone Ferrara , Eric Lander , Charles Sawyers , Robert Weinberg , Shinya Yamanaka and Bert Vogelstein (2013)
James P. Allison , Mahlon DeLong , Michael N. Hall , Robert S. Langer , Richard P. Lifton and Alexander Varshavsky (2014)
Alim Louis Benabid , Charles David Allis , Victor Ambros , Gary Ruvkun , Jennifer Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier (2015)
Edward Boyden , Karl Deisseroth , John Hardy , Helen Hobbs and Svante Pääbo (2016)
Stephen J. Elledge , Harry F. Noller , Roeland Nusse , Yoshinori Ohsumi , Huda Zoghbi (2017)
Joanne Chory , Peter Walter , Kazutoshi Mori , Kim Nasmyth , Don W. Cleveland (2018)
C. Frank Bennett and Adrian R. Krainer , Angelika Amon , Xiaowei Zhuang , Zhijian Chen (2019)
Jeffrey M. Friedman , Franz-Ulrich Hartl , Arthur L. Horwich , David Julius , Virginia Man-Yee Lee (2020)
David Baker , Catherine Dulac , Dennis Lo , Richard J. Youle [de ] (2021)
Jeffery W. Kelly , Katalin Karikó , Drew Weissman , Shankar Balasubramanian , David Klenerman and Pascal Mayer (2022)
Clifford P. Brangwynne , Anthony A. Hyman , Demis Hassabis , John Jumper , Emmanuel Mignot , Masashi Yanagisawa (2023)
Carl June , Michel Sadelain , Sabine Hadida , Paul Negulescu , Fredrick Van Goor , Thomas Gasser , Ellen Sidransky and Andrew Singleton (2024)
International National Academics Other