Ralph Jimenez
· Professor Adjoint • Institute Fellow, JILAVerifiedUniversity of Colorado Boulder · Chemistry
Active 1979–2026
About
Ralph Jimenez is a Professor and Adjunct Institute Fellow at JILA, University of Colorado Boulder, in the Department of Chemistry. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1996 and completed postdoctoral work at the University of California, San Diego, from 1997 to 1998. His research focuses on the interface of quantum optics with physical chemistry, particularly manipulating light at the single-photon or few-photon level to enhance spectroscopy through quantum-engineered light, utilizing properties such as entanglement, superposition, and coherence to increase sensitivity and information content. Jimenez's work also involves the photophysics of fluorescent proteins, aiming to develop molecular probes with improved brightness, photostability, and other properties for cellular imaging and single-molecule measurements. His contributions include establishing methods to increase fluorescent protein brightness and applying machine-learning approaches to improve photostability, addressing longstanding challenges in the field of genetically encoded biomarkers.
Research topics
- Physics
- Chemistry
- Optics
- Quantum mechanics
- Atomic physics
- Biology
- Biophysics
Selected publications
2026-03-04
articleFigshare · 2026-05-15
articleOpen accessSupplemental document
Dark-State-Mediated Photobleaching in mCherry-Based Red Fluorescent Proteins
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters · 2026-03-16
articleOpen accessSenior authorDeveloping bright and photostable red fluorescent proteins (RFPs) is one of the "holy grails" of the protein engineering community. Despite several attempts, such fluorescent proteins (FPs) have remained elusive. One bottleneck to engineering next-generation RFPs is our lack of understanding of nonfluorescent or dark-state properties in such constructs. Here, we develop a theoretical and experimental framework that describes how photobleaching decays in FPs relate to dark-state conversion and ground-state recovery. Our systematic photophysical investigation of mCherry and mCherry-d, an RFP with enhanced dark-state behavior, showed the presence of photodestructive dark states in such FPs. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal enhanced fluctuation around the imidazolinone end of the chromophore in mCherry-d, potentially facilitating conversion to nonfluorescent states. Collectively, this work quantifies dark-state kinetics and provides insights into engineering dark states in RFPs to develop bright, yet photostable, molecular probes.
Two-photon-excited fluorescence spectroscopy of Rb atoms in a magneto-optical trap
ArXiv.org · 2026-02-06
articleOpen accessSenior authorWe report the results of two-photon-excited fluorescence (TPEF) measurements of the $5\mathrm{S}_{1/2} \rightarrow 5\mathrm{D}_{1/2}$ transition of $^{85}$Rb and $^{87}$Rb cooled in a magneto-optical trap (MOT). We observe TPEF at excitation powers as low as 1 $μ$W or fluxes as low as $4.30 \pm 0.22 \times 10^{18}\ \text{photons}\,\text{cm}^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}$ ($^{85}$Rb) and $5.17 \pm 0.26 \times 10^{18}\ \text{photons}\,\text{cm}^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}$ ($^{87}$Rb). Our results show that Rb, with additional benefits due to its ability to be optically cooled to the point where Doppler-broadening is negligible, is a promising platform for observing sensitive two-photon spectral signatures at low photon fluxes.
Figshare · 2026-05-15
articleOpen accessSupplemental document
Long-term stabilization of intensity-difference squeezing from four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor
Figshare · 2026-05-15
otherOpen accessGeneration of quantum states of light through off-resonance four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor is a straightforward and well-established technique. However, achieving a sufficiently high and consistent level of intensity difference squeezing (IDS) and intrinsic quantum correlations between photon pairs over an extended timescale, necessary for quantum-light-based nonlinear optical spectroscopy and microscopy, remains challenging and largely unexplored. Here, we report a simple stabilization method combining an active periodic laser frequency retuning with an automatic control algorithm based on quantitatively assessing the factors affecting the IDS level and squeezed light intensity. Validation of our method was performed by acquiring data over a 5-hour period and the results demonstrate a remarkably stable squeezing level of -7.8 dB in combination with a > 4× reduction of the standard deviation of IDS level from 0.46 dB to 0.10 dB. The achieved stabilization further enables us to quantitatively assess the IDS reduction due to the scattering in a polystyrene bead suspension as a function of sample transmission. Our approach should enable a variety of applications requiring an extended squeezing stability over multiple hours, especially for those following biological processes and chemical reactions in real time.
Two-photon-excited fluorescence spectroscopy of Rb atoms in a magneto-optical trap
Open MIND · 2026-02-06
preprintSenior authorWe report the results of two-photon-excited fluorescence (TPEF) measurements of the $5\mathrm{S}_{1/2} \rightarrow 5\mathrm{D}_{1/2}$ transition of $^{85}$Rb and $^{87}$Rb cooled in a magneto-optical trap (MOT). We observe TPEF at excitation powers as low as 1 $μ$W or fluxes as low as $4.30 \pm 0.22 \times 10^{18}\ \text{photons}\,\text{cm}^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}$ ($^{85}$Rb) and $5.17 \pm 0.26 \times 10^{18}\ \text{photons}\,\text{cm}^{-2}\,\text{s}^{-1}$ ($^{87}$Rb). Our results show that Rb, with additional benefits due to its ability to be optically cooled to the point where Doppler-broadening is negligible, is a promising platform for observing sensitive two-photon spectral signatures at low photon fluxes.
Long-term stabilization of intensity-difference squeezing from four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor
Figshare · 2026-05-15
otherOpen accessGeneration of quantum states of light through off-resonance four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor is a straightforward and well-established technique. However, achieving a sufficiently high and consistent level of intensity difference squeezing (IDS) and intrinsic quantum correlations between photon pairs over an extended timescale, necessary for quantum-light-based nonlinear optical spectroscopy and microscopy, remains challenging and largely unexplored. Here, we report a simple stabilization method combining an active periodic laser frequency retuning with an automatic control algorithm based on quantitatively assessing the factors affecting the IDS level and squeezed light intensity. Validation of our method was performed by acquiring data over a 5-hour period and the results demonstrate a remarkably stable squeezing level of -7.8 dB in combination with a > 4× reduction of the standard deviation of IDS level from 0.46 dB to 0.10 dB. The achieved stabilization further enables us to quantitatively assess the IDS reduction due to the scattering in a polystyrene bead suspension as a function of sample transmission. Our approach should enable a variety of applications requiring an extended squeezing stability over multiple hours, especially for those following biological processes and chemical reactions in real time.
Dark state-mediated photobleaching in mCherry-based red fluorescent proteins
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2026-01-23
articleOpen accessSenior authorABSTRACT Developing bright and photostable red fluorescent proteins (RFPs) is one of the ‘holy grails’ of the protein engineering community. Despite several attempts, finding such fluorescent proteins (FPs) has remained elusive. One bottleneck to engineering next generation RFPs is our lack of understanding of non-fluorescent or dark state properties in such constructs. Here, we develop a theoretical and experimental framework that describes how photobleaching decays in FPs relates to dark state conversion and ground state recovery. Our systematic photophysical investigation of mCherry and mCherry-d, an RFP with enhanced dark state behavior, showed the presence of photodestructive dark states in such FPs. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal enhanced fluctuation around the imidazolinone-end of the chromophore in mCherry-d, potentially facilitating conversion to non-fluorescent states. Collectively, this work quantifies dark state kinetics and gives insights into engineering dark states in RFPs to develop bright yet photostable molecular probes.
Long-term stabilization of intensity-difference squeezing from four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor
Optics Express · 2026-05-04
articleOpen accessGeneration of quantum states of light through off-resonance four-wave mixing in rubidium vapor is a straightforward and well-established technique. However, achieving a sufficiently high and consistent level of intensity difference squeezing (IDS) and intrinsic quantum correlations between photon pairs over an extended timescale, necessary for quantum-light-based nonlinear optical spectroscopy and microscopy, remains challenging and largely unexplored. Here, we report a simple stabilization method combining an active periodic laser frequency retuning with an automatic control algorithm based on quantitatively assessing the factors affecting the IDS level and squeezed light intensity. Validation of our method was performed by acquiring data over a 5-hour period, and the results demonstrate a remarkably stable squeezing level of -7.8 dB in combination with a > 4× reduction of the standard deviation of IDS level from 0.46 dB to 0.10 dB. The achieved stabilization further enables us to quantitatively assess the IDS reduction due to the scattering in a polystyrene bead suspension as a function of sample transmission. Our approach should enable a variety of applications requiring an extended squeezing stability over multiple hours, especially for those following biological processes and chemical reactions in real time.
Recent grants
NSF · $345k · 2005–2009
NIH · $1.5M · 2013
Collaborative Research: Development of a High Speed Cell Mechanical Property Testing Cytometer
NSF · $282k · 2009–2013
Frequent coauthors
- 67 shared
Srijit Mukherjee
Stanford University
- 57 shared
Alexander Mikhaylov
- 52 shared
Amy E. Palmer
- 50 shared
Kristen M. Parzuchowski
- 49 shared
Emily A. Gibson
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
- 46 shared
Michael D. Mazurek
- 43 shared
Ryan N. Wilson
Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics
- 40 shared
Premashis Manna
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Education
- 1996
Ph.D.
University of Chicago
- 1998
Other
University of California, San Diego
- 2003
Other
The Scripps Research Institute
Awards & honors
- Arthur S. Flemming Award 2017
- U.S. Department of Commerce Gold Medal 2017
- U.S. Department of Commerce Bronze Medal 2016
- U.S. Department of Commerce Bronze Medal 2023
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