Detailed independent secondary sources and related context
editHello,
Following feedback from WikiProject Physics and the Teahouse regarding sourcing, notability, and conflict-of-interest considerations, I am listing below potential independent secondary sources that may be relevant for assessing this draft and supporting key factual statements.
- Institute of Physics – Thomas Young Medal and Prize (2018), awarded to Dieter Jaksch.
https://www.iop.org/about/awards/silver-subject-medals/thomas-young-medal-and-prize-recipients Coverage: Official announcement by the Institute of Physics confirming the award of the Thomas Young Medal and Prize to Dieter Jaksch in 2018. Relevant for: Lead section; Awards and honours (establishes notability under WP:PROF).
- University of Oxford / Keble College announcement of the Thomas Young Medal award.
https://www.keble.ox.ac.uk/news/406/ Coverage: Institutional announcement reporting the award and contextualizing Jaksch’s academic role. Relevant for: Career; Awards.
- Independent scientific news coverage on neutral atom quantum computing.
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/641743 Coverage: Scientific news report discussing advances in neutral atom quantum computing and referencing related research contributions. Relevant for: Research; Neutral atom quantum computing context.
- Independent press coverage of collaborative research projects involving Jaksch.
https://hamburg-business.com/de/news/uni-hamburg-und-lufthansa-entwickeln-quantenalgorithmus-fuer-flughaefen Coverage: Reports on a collaborative research project between the University of Hamburg and Lufthansa Industry Solutions, mentioning Jaksch’s involvement. Relevant for: Applied research activities.
- Review articles on optical lattices and quantum simulation (e.g. Reviews of Modern Physics, Nature Physics).
Coverage: Peer-reviewed review literature summarizing the development of the field and citing Jaksch’s work as part of the foundational research. Relevant for: Research overview; Contextual significance.
In addition, for contextual reference only, Wikipedia already includes content related to the concept known as the “Jaksch gate” within the article on neutral atom quantum computers:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutral_atom_quantum_computer#Jaksch_gate
This internal Wikipedia link is provided solely as contextual information and does not replace the need for independent, reliable secondary sources.
As I have a declared conflict of interest, I am not editing or adding these sources directly to the article text. They are listed here for consideration and potential use by independent editors.
Thank you.