May 2 | 4 - 5pm
FAZLUL LASKAR / LASP

Improving Whole Atmospheric Reanalysis by Assimilating GOLD Observations in WACCMX -- Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP)
LASP – Space Science Building, SPSC-W120 & Zoom
Abstract & Event Details

Abstract:  Remember the saying “All models are wrong, but some are useful”. Well, some of the useful models can be made realistic by ingesting experimental measurements through data assimilation. This presentation will show examples of how Global Scale Observations of the Limb and Disk (GOLD) mission observations played a crucial role in improving a whole atmospheric reanalysis. The NSF-NCAR Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model with thermosphere-ionosphere eXtension (WACCMX) model is used as the forecasting model and Data Assimilation Research Testbed (DART) ensemble adjustment Kalman filter is used for the assimilation. In addition to assimilation of GOLD disk temperature and O/N2 observation, lower atmospheric meteorological observations and temperatures from NASA-SABER and Aura-MLS are also assimilated to improve the atmosphere of the Earth from surface to the thermosphere-ionosphere altitudes. The addition of the GOLD observations in the assimilation improved the thermosphere-ionosphere in the whole atmosphere reanalysis. This presentation will demonstrate the great potential of the GOLD data to improve satellite drag and forecasting, which is becoming very crucial for space traffic control.
 

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Zoom Information

The zoom link for each seminar will be provided in LASP Seminar emails. Please contact scienceseminars@lasp.colorado.edu to be added to the mailing list.

Visitor Information

Please be aware that the exterior SPSC building doors are generally kept locked. Any non-LASP seminar attendees should email Jem Averyt (jem.averyt@lasp.colorado.edu) in advance to make any necessary arrangements for building access.

 

For more info: https://lasp.colorado.edu/home/events-and-outreach

Address Info:

LASP – Space Science Building

SPSC-W120

3665 Discovery Drive, Boulder, CO 80303

Map: https://lasp.colorado.edu/home/maps/spsc-w120/

May 3 | 12:30 - 1:30pm
Oliver Hart / Dept of Physics, U. Colorado

Playing nonlocal games across a topological phase transition on a quantum computer -- CTQM Theory Colloquium
Duane Physics Room G126
Abstract & Event Details

Abstract: Many-body quantum games provide a natural perspective on phases of matter in quantum hardware, crisply relating their properties to the securing of quantum advantage at a device-oriented task. These games can be viewed as generalizations of Bell tests, and they provide powerful and direct probes of quantum correlations that leverage the access to the entire wavefunction provided by quantum hardware. Previous studies have utilized many-body resource states in a fine-tuned manner, such that arbitrarily weak gate imperfections or noise will destroy any quantum advantage in the thermodynamic limit. In this talk, I will show how notions of topological order can be used to design multiplayer nonlocal games affording robust and scalable quantum advantage, which we explicitly verify in experiments carried out on Quantinuum's trapped-ion quantum processor H1-1. 

May 6 | 10 - 11am
Brendan Marsh/Stanford

Realization of a Quantum-Optical Spin Glass -- OtherPostdoc Candidate Colloquium
JILA X317
Abstract & Event Details

Abstract: Spin glasses—large-scale networks of spins with deeply frustrated interactions—are canonical examples of complex matter. Although much about their structure remains uncertain, they inform the description of a wide array of complex phenomena, ranging from magnetic ordering in metals with impurities to aspects of evolution, protein folding, climate models, and combinatorial optimization. Indeed, spin glass theory forms a mathematical basis for neuromorphic computing and brain modeling. Advancing experimental insight into their structure requires repeatable control over microscopic degrees of freedom. Here, we achieve this at the atomic level using a quantum-optical system comprised of ultracold gases of Rb atoms coupled via photons resonating within a multimode optical cavity. The network of atomic ensembles scatter light from a transverse pump laser into the cavity modes to realize an unusual type of transverse-field spin glass with all-to-all connectivity. A superradiant phase transition occurs upon reaching a critical pump strength, concomitant with spin glass ordering. Spin configurations are observed in the superradiant cavity emission and reveal the emergence of replica symmetry breaking and nascent ultrametric structure as signatures of spin-glass order. The controllability provided by this new spin-glass system, potentially down to the quantum-spin-level, enables the study of spin-glass physics in novel regimes with application to quantum neural network computing.

May 18 | 9:30 - 10:30am
Prof. Eric Cornell / Dept. of Physics & JILA, U. of Colorado Boulder

SPEED! -- CU Wizards Program
Duane Physics Room G1B30
Abstract & Event Details

Jun 29 | 9:30 - 10:30am
Prof. Andrew Hamilton / Dept. of Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences & JILA, U. of Colorado Boulder

BLACKHOLES! -- CU Wizards Program
Fiske Planetarium
Abstract & Event Details

Directory

A B C D E F G H J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Name (Group) Email - Room
James C Uhrich
(Instrument Shop)
james.uhrich@colorado.edu
B138
Maxwell D Urmey
(Regal)
maxwell.urmey@colorado.edu
A309A
Lyle R Uyetake
(Perkins)
uyetake@colorado.edu
A505A