School of Physical & Mathematical Sciences, Division of Physics & Applied Physics, Nanyang Technological University Singapore, and a Principal Investigator at the Centre for Quantum Technologies, NUS.
Rainer Dumke studied Physics at the Leibniz University in Hanover / Germany and received his Dr. rer. nat. (PhD) in 2003. The title of the theses was Atom Optic and Quantum Information Processing With Micro Structured Optical Elements. During his PhD he worked for half a year at the National Institute for Standard and Technologies (NIST, Gaithersburg USA) on ultra cold Rydberg atoms. After finishing his PhD in Hanover he received a prestige Fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt foundation. In 2003 he went again to NIST (Gaithersburg, USA) to continue research in the same group in the field of ultra cold molecules and quantum degenerate gases. After two years in September 2005 Rainer Dumke started a new research position at the Max Planck Research Group in Erlangen, Germany. Here he focused on the realization of an optical atomic clock based on an ultra cold trapped single Indium ion. In September 2006 he came to Singapore and worked in the new established School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences in the Division of Physics and Applied Physics at the Nanyang Technological University Singapore. During his carrer his achievements included: Analysis of wave packets in an optical lattice. Investigating the formation of Rydberg atoms in an ultra cold plasma. First generation and application of an optical micro structure for a guided atom interferometer. First demonstration of the application of micro optical systems for quantum information processing. Studying the coherence properties of guided-atom interferometers. Sub-natural-linewidth quantum interference features: Atom-Molecule Coherence. All optical generation and photoassociative probing of sodium Bose-Einstein condensates. Development towards an optical frequency standard in the deep UV. His achievements are well documented in numerous publications.