Jared Cole | |
Nationality: | Australian |
Fields: | Physics |
Workplaces: | RMIT University University of Melbourne Karlsruhe University ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies (FLEET) ARC Centre for Exciton Science |
Alma Mater: | RMIT University (B. App Physics and B. Comm Eng (Hons)), University of Melbourne (PhD) |
Thesis Title: | Controllable few-state quantum systems for information processing |
Known For: | quantum physics, decoherence theory |
Jared Cole is an Australian theoretical physicist specialising in quantum physics and decoherence theory and its application to solid-state systems. He specialises in using mathematical and computational models to describe the design and operation of quantum computing and quantum electronic devices.
Cole is a professor at RMIT University[1] where he leads study of theoretical condensed-matter physics, superconducting devices, charge transport in nanoscale devices, quantum metrology and decoherence theory. He is the Group Leader of RMIT's Theoretical Chemical and Quantum Physics Research Group.
Quantum circuit theory, superconducting devices based on the Josephson effect, spin physics, decoherence, measurement and entanglement theory, quantum information and quantum computing.
Cole completed a Bachelor of Applied Physics and Communication Engineering (Hons) from RMIT University in 2002 and a PhD University of Melbourne in 2006 (Controllable few-state quantum systems for information processing).
Cole was a postdoctoral researcher within the Centre for Quantum Computing Technology, University of Melbourne from 2006 to 2007, studying solid-state quantum computing.[2]
Cole was postdoctoral researcher (initially as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow) at Karlsruhe University 2007–11, studying qubit characterisation, superconducting qubits and defects in Josephson junctions.
Cole returned to RMIT University in Feb. 2011 as a Vice-Chancellor's senior research fellow, and was made a full professor in Jan 2018.
Cole is a chief investigator within the ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low-Energy Electronics Technologies (FLEET), investigating the influence of dissipation and decoherence on electronic transport in nanostructures, and its role in electronic devices based on topologically protected conduction channels.[3]
Cole is a chief investigator within the ARC Centre of Excellence for Exciton Science,[4] applying expertise in electron transport, spin physics and decoherence theory to understanding the control and manipulation of excitons to create more-efficient solar cells.[5]
Cole is a founding partner at h-bar, a consultancy dedicated to quantum information and quantum technology.[6]
Cole has authored over 80 peer-reviewed publications, has been cited over 2300 times and has an h-index of 26. He holds five patents.
Cole has written general-audience articles on Australia quantum research,[7] low-energy electronics (in The Conversation[8]), and has been interviewed on metric units[9] and ICT energy use.[10]