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Ebrahim Karimi (physicist)

Iranian-Canadian optical physicist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ebrahim Karimi (physicist)
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Ebrahim Karimi (Kurdish: Îbrahîm Kerîmî; Persian: ابراهیم کریمی; born 1978 in Saqqez, Kurdistan Province) is a quantum scientist at University of Ottawa and Chapman University.[1][2][3] He is the Canada Research Chair in Structured Waves and Quantum Communication.[4][5]

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Biography

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Karimi was born into a Kurdish family in the city of Saqqez, located in Iran’s Kurdistan Province.[6] Karimi grew up amid the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s and completed his early education in his hometown of Saqqez and received his Diplomat from Iqbal Lahouri highschool, before joining Department of Physics at Kerman University in 1997. He received his B.Sc. in Physics with emphasis on mathematics from Kerman University in 2001. He began his graduate studies in the mathematical physics group at IASBS, obtaining 18th place in Iran's University Entrance Exam. Later, he shifted his research focus and under the supervision of Yousef Sobouti, completing his thesis on "Laser Cooling and Trapping of Natural Atoms", and receiving his M.Sc. in optics in 2003. During this time, he also collaborated on singular optics with Mohammad Taghi Tavassoli and H. M. Khalesifard. In 2009, he earned his PhD from the University of Naples Federico II supervised by Lorenzo Marrucci and Enrico Santamato, and received the award for best PhD thesis for his work on Light Orbital Angular Momentum and Its applications in classical and quantum information. After completing his PhD, he worked as a postdoctoral fellow with Marrucci and Santamato in Naples. In September 2012, he joined Robert W. Boyd's quantum optics group at University of Ottawa as a postdoctoral fellow. He became assistant professor of physics at Ottawa in 2015, and associate professor in 2020.[7][8][9][10] In 2023 He was the recipient of Rutherford Memorial Medal from the Royal Society of Canada.[11][12][13]

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Work

In 2019, Karimi's team at Ottawa has successfully developed and operated the first quantum simulator specifically designed to model cyclic (ring-shaped) quantum systems. The team used individual photons—quantum of light—to simulate the quantum behavior of electrons in rings composed of varying numbers of atoms. The experimental results revealed that the physics governing ring-shaped systems differs fundamentally from that of linear (line-shaped) systems.[14]

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Honors and awards

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