2016 - now: Stanford
In the fall of 2016, I started graduate school in physics at Stanford. I had worked on the optical Kerr interferrometer at Kapitonik group briefly, and eventually settled in Moler group, working on scanning SQUID miscroscopy. The scanning SQUID (Superconducting QUantum Interferrence Device) is a great magnetometer in revealling mesoscopic novel magnetic phenomena . I'm particularly interested in studying unconventional high temperature superconductors, namely, pnictides, cuprates and nickelates. I have also worked on cryogenic sample cage deisgning, and sub-Kelvin temperature calibration with a GaAs quantum dot.
I have a broad interest in scientific developments outside of my field. In particular, machine learning and quantum computing. I had taken CS299 Machine Learning and scored top 10% in the midterm (final project was optional in spring 2020). I gave a talk about quantum simulation for my oral qualifying exam in 2018.