Skip to content
  • Emergency
  • NAT-Wiki
  • TUMonline
  • Moodle
  • Webmail
  • Webdisk
  • e-Journals
  • App Server
  • CIP Pool
  • de
  • en
  • TUM School of Natural Sciences
  • Technical University of Munich
Technical University of Munich
  • Homepage
  • News and Events
    • Bioscience
    • Chemistry
    • Physics
    • Awards
    • ERC Grants
    • Rankings
    • TUM in figures
    • Events
      • Open house day
        • 2024
      • Day of Diversity in Physics
      • Tag der Physik
        • Tag der Physik 2024
        • Tag der Physik 2023
      • Chemistry graduation ceremony
        • Archive
          • Chemistry graduation ceremony
          • Chemistry graduation ceremony
      • Physics graduation ceremony
        • Previous graduation ceremonies in physics
          • Physics graduation ceremony (June)
          • Physics graduation ceremony 2023 (November)
          • Physics graduation ceremony 2024 (June)
          • Physics graduation ceremony 2024 (November)
          • Physics graduation ceremony 2025 (February)
      • Physik-Kolloquium
  • Professors
  • Our School
    • Contact and directions
      • In an emergency: What to do?
    • Organization
      • Executive Board
      • School Council
      • Organigram
    • School Administration
    • Professors
      • TUM Junior Fellows
    • Graduate Center
    • Equal opportunities
      • Child care
      • Study and work with family
      • Support for Ukranian students
    • IT Office
      • IT-Service 5100
      • IT-Service 5400
        • Team
        • Support
        • CIP Pool
        • Info
        • TUMcard
    • Central Services
      • Elektronik 5100
      • Elektronik 5400
        • Mitarbeiter
        • Service
        • Auftragsabwicklung
        • Projekte
          • Heizungssteuerung
          • HV-Supply
          • Ionenfalle
          • Laser Shutter
          • LabVIEW Praktikum
          • Piezopulser
          • Potentiostat
          • Spirograph
        • Lageplan
      • Feinmechanik 5100
      • Feinmechanik 5400
        • Mitarbeiter
        • Service
        • Auftragsabwicklung
        • Lageplan
      • Glasbläserei
      • Kühlmittel und Gase
      • Strahlenschutz und Arbeitssicherheit
      • Teilbibliotheken
        • Dokumenten-Dienst
          • Subito
      • Ver- und Entsorgung
      • Lecture Technology and Physics Collection
      • Scientific computing
      • Zentrales Technologielabor
        • Technologielabor
        • Digitallabor
    • Outreach
      • TUM Open Campus Day
      • studium MINT
      • Unitag an der TUM
      • Open Doors with the Mouse 2023
    • Our History
      • Chemistry
        • Inorganic Chemistry
        • Organic Chemistry
        • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
        • Technical Chemistry
      • Physics
  • Academics
  • Research
    • Main Research Areas
      • Accelerated Scientific Discovery
      • Biomolecular Engineering & Design
      • Clean Technology Solutions
      • Fundamental Forces and Cosmic Evolution
      • Fundamental Science for Health
      • Quantum Science & Technologies
    • Professional Profiles
    • Departments
    • Clusters
    • CRCs and Transregios
    • TUM Centers
    • Core Facilities
    • Research on Campus Garching
  • Intranet
  • Sitemap
  1. Homepage
  2. News and Events
  3. Physics

News Department of Physics

Dr. Hans Hübl has been appointed Adjunct Professor at TUM

Quantum Science & Technologies, MCQST, Research, Physics | 16.12.2024

In recognition for many years of excellence in research and teaching

Dr. Hans Hübl. Image: Jan Greune / MCQST

The Technical University of Munich (TUM) has appointed Dr. habil. Hans Hübl as an Adjunct Professor in recognition of his excellent contributions to both research and teaching. Hans Hübl is a research group leader at the Walther-Meißner-Institute (WMI) of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities (BAdW) since 2009 and a lecturer at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) since 2014. As a member of the excellence cluster Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST) and the Munich Quantum Valley (MQV), he makes key contributions to the successful research and teaching program in quantum science and technology.   

Hans Hübl received his physics education at the Technical University of Munich, where he completed his doctorate at the Walter Schottky Institute in 2007. After a stay as a postdoctoral fellow at the Centre for Quantum Computer Technology at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia in 2007 and 2008, he returned to Germany in 2009 to the Walther Meißner Institute of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Garching. Starting on an initial temporary position as a research assistant, he was quickly given a permanent position there as Senior Academic Advisor and later Academic Director and Deputy Institute Director. At the Walther Meißner Institute, he heads an independent research group working very successfully on the topics of spin dynamics and hybrid quantum systems. He received the habilitation degree and became a lecturer in experimental physics at TUM in 2014. Since then, he has been actively involved in teaching and most recently contributed to the very successful new interdisciplinary master course in Quantum Science and Technology. In 2012, he received the Academy Prize of the Karl Thiemig Foundation, and in 2020, he was named APS Outstanding Referee.

A particular strength of Hans Hübl is fostering collaborations in coordinated research programs. He has been one of the key figures in several coordinated research programs in the greater Munich area for many years. From 2010 to 2015, he was Principal Investigator in the Collaborative Research Center 631 (Solid-state Based Quantum Information Processing), from 2013 to 2018, he was a member of the Cluster of Excellence “Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM)”, and from 2019 Core PI of the Cluster of Excellence “Munich Center for Quantum Science and Technology (MCQST)”. He was also Principal Investigator of the DFG Priority Program “New Frontiers in Sensitivity for EPR Spectroscopy: From Biological Cells to Nano Materials (SPP 1601, 2015-2019)” and has been Principal Investigator in numerous EU research projects (e.g., in the collaborative projects (i) “Magnetomechanical Platforms for Quantum Experiments and Quantum Enabled Sensing Technologies (MaQSens, 2017-2022)”, (ii) “Exploring Nonclassical States of Center-of-Mass Mechanical Motion with Superconducting Magneto- and Levitomechanics (SuperMeQ, 2022-2026)”, (iii) “Open Superconducting Quantum Computers (OpenSuperQPlus, 2023-2027)”) and BMBF collaborative projects (e.g. QuaMToMe). Finally, it should not go unmentioned that Hans Hübl is a central pillar of the Munich Quantum Valley (MQV) and PI at the newly approved DFG Collaborative Research Center/Transregio TRR 360 “Constrained Quantum Matter”, which started in October 2023.

Key scientific achievements

For many years, Hans Hübl is considered a leading international expert in two particular subfields: (i) spin dynamics and quantum magnonics and (ii) hybrid quantum systems. He has contributed to both fields with fundamental publications and pioneering work. With the first proof of strong coherent photon-magnon coupling (Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 127003 (2013)), he established the new field of “cavity quantum magnonics”. Together with his colleagues at UNSW, he demonstrated the efficient readout of spin qubits for the first time (Nature 467, 687 (2010)). Moreover, in fundamental work on circuit quantum electrodynamics, ultra-strong coupling was demonstrated for the first time (Nature Physics 6, 772 (2010)). Equally important is the work on the first demonstration of the spin-Nernst effect (Nature Materials 16, 977-981 (2017)), the generation of slow light in nanoelectromechanical circuits (Nature Physics 9, 179 (2013)), the observation of multiple spin echoes in electron spin resonance (Phys. Rev. Lett. 125, 137701 (2020)) or on the detection of the Hanle effect in antiferromagnets (Phys. Rev. Lett. 130, 216703 (2023)).

About TUM Adjunct Professors

At the Technical University of Munich (TUM), research staff members with a habilitation degree can be appointed as an “Adjunct Professor” if they have made excellent contributions to their field of research and demonstrated convincing performance in teaching over several years. The appointment procedure for adjunct professors is similar to that for associate professors. It is based on an international best practice and relies on international peer evaluation. It requires excellent performance in research, particularly regarding quantity, quality, and impact of research accomplishments and the academic standing in the discipline in relation to contemporaries. 

 

Contact information:

Prof. Dr. Hans Hübl, Prof. Dr. Rudolf Gross
Walther-Meißner-Institut
Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften & Technische Universität München
Walther-Meißner-Straße 8, D-85748 Garching
www.wmi.badw.de


Press contact

communications(at)nat.tum.de 


◄ Back to: Physics
To top

TUM School of Natural Sciences

Technische Universität
München

Boltzmannstr. 10
85748 Garching

  • Privacy
  • Imprint
  • Accessibility