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  1. John M. Doyle. Henry B. Silsbee Professor of Physics. Co-Director of the Quantum Science and Engineering Initiative. John Doyle's research centers on using cold molecules for science ranging from bio-analysis to particle physics to quantum information.

  2. Welcome to the Harvard Doyle Research Group! With a versatile technique of cryogenic buffer-gas cooling we prepare bright beams and trapped samples of very cold molecules for exploring quantum science, elementary particle physics and ultracold chemistry.

  3. John M. Doyle. Professor of Physics, Harvard University. Verified email at physics.harvard.edu. Title. Sort. Sort by citations Sort by year Sort by title. Cited by. Cited by.

  4. John Doyle. Henry B. Silsbee Professor of Physics. CV. Lyman 326 • 17 Oxford Street. Cambridge, MA 02138. doyle [at] physics.harvard.edu. p: (617) 495-3201. Loic Anderegg. Research Associate. CaOH & CaF & SrOH. Loïc Anderegg grew up in Southern California and attended UC Berkeley, receiving his B.A. in physics in 2014.

  5. John Doyle's research centers on using cold molecules for science ranging from bio-analysis to particle physics to quantum information. His group studies fundamental collisional processes in atoms and molecules and develop tools to achieve full quantum control over increasingly complex molecular systems.

  6. John Morrissey Doyle is an American physicist working in the field of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical (AMO) physics and Precision Particle Physics. He is the Henry B. Silsbee Professor of Physics, Director of the Japanese Undergraduate Research Exchange Program (JUREP), Co-Director of the Harvard Quantum Initiative as well as Co-director of the ...

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  8. rformed in Atomic, Molecular and Optical physics and Elementary Particle physics. Current work centers around production, trapping, and use of cold and ultra-cold molecules in a variety of experiments including studies of quantum information systems, collisions, quantum gases, optical spectros.