Advances in Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics, Volume 72 highlights new advances in the field, with this new volume presenting interesting chapters written by an international board of authors.
- Provides the authority and expertise of leading contributors from an international board of authors
- Presents the latest release in the Advances in Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics series
- Includes the latest information in the field
1. Frustrated tunneling ionization: building a bridge between the internal and macroscopic states of an atom
Ulli Eichmann and Serguei Patchkovskii
2. Direct Laser Cooling of Polyatomic Molecules
Benjamin Augenbraun, Loic Anderegg, Christian Hallas, Zack Lasner, Nathaniel Vilas and John Doyle
3. Attosecond Electron Dynamics in Molecular Systems
Jonathan P. Marangos, Oliver G. Alexander, Marco Ruberti, Morgane Vacher
4. Super- and subradiance in dilute disordered cold atomic samples: observations and interpretations
William Guerin
5. Broadband Quantum Memory in Atomic Ensembles
Virginia O. Lorenz, Kai Shinbrough, Donny R. Pearson Jr., Bin Fang and Elizabeth A. Goldschmidt
6. The path to continuous Bose-Einstein condensation
Chun-Chia Chen, Shayne Bennetts and Florian Schreck
Susanne F. Yelin, is at the Physics Department, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA Louis F. DiMauro is Professor of Physics and Hagenlocker Chair at the Ohio State University. He received his BA (1975) from Hunter College, CUNY and his Ph.D. from University of Connecticut in 1980 and was a postdoctoral fellow at SUNY at Stony Brook before arriving at AT&T Bell Laboratories in 1981. He joined the staff at Brookhaven National Laboratory in 1988 rising to the rank of senior scientist. In 2004 he joined the faculty at The Ohio State University. He was awarded 2004 BNL/BSA Science & Technology Prize, 2012 OSU Distinguish Scholar Award, the 2013 OSA Meggers Prize and the 2017 APS Schawlow Prize in Laser Science. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the Optical Society of American and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He is currently the Director of the Institute for Optical Science and co-Director of the NSF NeXUS facility and the OSU Chemical Physics graduate program. He has served on numerous national and international committees, government panels, served as the 2010 APS DAMOP chair, vice-chair of the NAS CAMOS committee and currently serves on the NAS Board of Physics and Astronomy. His research interest is in experimental ultra-fast and strong-field physics. In 1993, he and his collaborators introduced the widely accepted semi-classical model in strong-field physics. His current work is focused on the generation, measurement, and application of attosecond x-ray pulses, study of fundamental scaling of strong field physics and application of x-ray free electron lasers. Hélčne Perrin is a CNRS Research Director, working at Université Sorbonne Paris Nord. She heads the BEC group at Laboratoire de physique des lasers, of which she is the deputy director. Her research is devoted mostly to experimental atomic physics with ultracold atoms, including Bose-Einstein condensation, low dimensional quantum gases and their superfluid dynamics. She also leads the regional network QuanTiP dedicated to quantum technologies, gathering more than 1000 researchers within Paris area.