One of this year's Nobel laureates in physics, Ferenc Krausz, is coming to Chalmers and giving the lecture Electrons and Light Waves: Teaming up to Protect Human Health. You are welcome to attend at Runan!
Overview
- Date:Starts 18 December 2023, 10:30Ends 18 December 2023, 12:00
- Location:Runan, Chalmers tekniska högskola
- Language:Engelska
The laureates’ experiments have produced pulses of light so short that they are measured in attoseconds, thus demonstrating that these pulses can be used to provide images of processes inside atoms and molecules.
In 1987, Anne L’Huillier discovered that many different overtones of light arose when she transmitted infrared laser light through a noble gas. Each overtone is a light wave with a given number of cycles for each cycle in the laser light. They are caused by the laser light interacting with atoms in the gas; it gives some electrons extra energy that is then emitted as light. Anne L’Huillier has continued to explore this phenomenon, laying the ground for subsequent breakthroughs.
In 2001, Pierre Agostini succeeded in producing and investigating a series of consecutive light pulses, in which each pulse lasted just 250 attoseconds. At the same time, Ferenc Krausz was working with another type of experiment, one that made it possible to isolate a single light pulse that lasted 650 attoseconds.