Konwersatorium im. Jerzego Pniewskiego i Leopolda Infelda, Wydziału Fizyki UW
W najbliższy poniedziałek (15.10.2018 r.) o godz. 16:30 w sali 0.03 odbędzie się pierwsze POŁĄCZONE konwersatorium Instytutu Fizyki Teoretycznej i Instytutu Fizyki Doświadczalnej im. Jerzego Pniewskiego i Leopolda Infelda. Gościć na nim będziemy
dr hab. Katarzynę Krajewską i prof. dr hab. Czesława Radzewicza
z Wydziału Fizyki UW. Zaproszeni mówcy wygłoszą wykład pt.
,,Nobel Prize in Physics 2018: Towards the shortest and the most intense laser pulses’’.
Przed konwersatorium, od godz. 16, zapraszamy na nieformalne dyskusje przy kawie i ciastkach w holu przed salą 0.03.
Abstrakt:
Nobel Prize in Physics 2018 has been awarded for groundbreaking inventions in the field of laser physics; one of them being the Chirped Pulse Amplification (CPA). The technique has been invented by Donna Strickland and her PhD advisor Gérard Mourou, and published in Strickland’s first research paper [1]. It has enabled a new generation of tabletop lasers that produce very short pulses of intense light. Such light interacts with matter in nonlinear ways, which has opened new physical regimes of experimental and theoretical explorations. Specifically, high-order harmonic generation has been discovered, leading recently to the development of attoscience. Another spectacular application of the CPA-based systems is the ability to directly accelerate charged particles by means of laser light. These and other physical examples of strong laser light applications will be discussed, none of which would be possible without the invention of the CPA.
[1] D. Strickland and G. Mourou, Opt. Commun. 56, 219 (1985).