Kaila Ronayne
General
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- Biography
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- Graduate Student
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- Kaila
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- Ronayne
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Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2016)
Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard University (2016-2019)
Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University (2019-2022)
Research Overview:
Quantum matter away from thermodynamic equilibrium can exhibit rich classes of dynamical behaviors that have no equilibrium analogue. An overarching goal of my research is to discover universal principles governing the dynamics and thermalization of quantum matter beyond equilibrium paradigms. Such principles can be applied to describe dynamics in a wide range of many-body systems, from electrons in solid-state materials to cold atoms in optical lattices to ensembles of spin defects, in spite of the apparent microscopic differences between such systems. More specifically, my research involves developing theoretical frameworks at the interface between non-equilibrium statistical mechanics and quantum information that can be used to describe, understand and, ultimately, control these novel dynamical behaviors. My research also studies how to exploit these novel behaviors for potential applications in emergent areas such as quantum sensing and metrology. Other research interests include the physics of low-dimensional electronic systems, and developing a deeper understanding of machine learning by drawing insights from statistical mechanics.
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Dr. Guzmán is an Associate Professor and experimental physicist with the departments of Aerospace Engineering and Physics & Astronomy at Texas A & M University (TAMU). His research focuses on the development of novel optomechanical inertial sensors, precision laser interferometry, and optical technologies for ground and space applications in gravitational-wave astrophysics, geosciences, navigation, and precision metrology. He is the PI of the TAMU groups within the LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC) and the LISA Consortium. Upon receiving his Ph.D. in Physics from the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Hannover, Germany, he was awarded a NASA Postdoctoral Program (NPP) fellowship at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center with the Gravitational Astrophysics Laboratory. Later, he became a Senior Research Associate at the Joint Quantum Institute (NIST and University of Maryland) and Research Group Leader at the German Space Agency (DLR) in collaboration with the University of Bremen.
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2021-In progress Texas A&M
2020-2021 Master Program Central China Normal University
2016-2020 Bachelor Program Central China Normal University
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