Jigang Wang can break his research goals into just a few words: "To discover and control quantum states of matter."
But, it takes paragraphs, analogies, illustrations, internet searches and a willingness to decipher talk about "non-equilibrium quantum phase discovery via non-thermal ultrafast quench near quantum critical points" to get a handle on those eight words.
Even though it's a head-scratcher, Wang's work could be a big deal to all of us.
Harnessing quantum physics -- the particles and energy down at atomic scales -- could lead to better computing, sensing, communicating and data storing technologies. But first researchers such as Wang -- a professor of physics and astronomy at Iowa State University and a physicist at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames Laboratory -- need to provide more answers about the quantum world.
In Wang's case, many of those answers are coming from quantum terahertz spectroscopy that can visualize and steer electrons.
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