Quantum technology is advancing rapidly, but solving one fundamental challenge could speed up development even further: getting systems from different modalities to communicate effectively with each other. Assistant Professor Jing Xu’s Experimental Quantum magnetics Laboratory (EQMag Lab) at the University of Central Florida focuses on quantum magnonics, specifically how magnetic excitations – known as magnons – behave inside quantum devices. Research in the lab blends fundamental physics with hands-on engineering – could it hold the key to getting quantum systems talking?

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