PHYS 523 :: Physics Illinois :: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Topics
Material and Schedule
- Brief technical descriptions
- September 4: give proposal talk and and submit mini proposal
- September 2, 2025: have drafts of proposal talk and mini proposal (templates below)
- proposal talk
- mini proposal (1 page suffcient)
- August 28, 2025
- Introduction to the cryogenic focus area (Chen-Yu Liu)
- Demo on a cloud chamber for cosmic ray detection
- August 26, 2025
- Introduction to the MEng program and PHYS-523, Fall 2025 (Caroline Riedl)
- Introduction to the muon tomography focus area (Caroline Riedl)
- Introduction to the radiation hardness focus area (Matthias Perdekamp)
The offered focus areas are introduced below:
- Cryogenic technologies for quantum industries
- Muon Tomography for commercial and security applications
- Radiation monitoring for extreme environments
Cryogenic technologies for quantum industries
Quantum computer development is rapidly approaching the stage where scalable architectures and sensing technologies can enable practical, real-world applications. The scalability of quantum technologies—whether for computing, networking, or sensing—depends not only on advances in qubit design but also on the ability to build and maintain cryogenic platforms that are efficient, modular, and industrially deployable. As such, the cryogenic infrastructure forms a critical backbone for this emerging industry, enabling the extreme low-temperature environments to operate quantum devices such as superconducting qubits, cryogenic sensors, and ultra-stable quantum communication components. These systems typically operate at millikelvin temperatures, necessitating advanced dilution refrigerators, high-reliability cryocoolers, and robust thermal management solutions. As the quantum industry moves from laboratory-scale experiments to commercial-scale applications, a specialized workforce that can innovate and support the cryogenic infrastructure is in demand.
The MEng program at Loomis Laboratory aims to develop a workforce capable of supporting the cryogenic infrastructure needs of quantum industries, offering a multi-tiered training program that bridges physics, engineering, and practical technical skills. The curriculum includes low-temperature physics, thermodynamics, and superconductivity with applied expertise in refrigeration engineering, precision manufacturing, and materials science. The program offers hands-on experience with dilution refrigerators, vacuum systems, and cryogenic electronics, which is complemented by instruction in automation, cryogenic safety, and system integration for large-scale industrial use.
The centerpiece of our cryo-training module is a year-long project to construct a dilution refrigerator from scratch. Students will learn practical technical skills to design, construct, troubleshoot and solve problems needed to create a sub-Kelvin environement needed to operate quantum sensors. The MEng program also prepares individuals for diverse roles—ranging from cryogenic technicians to system engineers and applied scientists—while also ensuring adaptability as technologies evolve.
Muon Tomography for commercial and security applications
See the focus area Muon Tomography page for further course details.
Radiation monitoring for extreme environments
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