Ferenc Krausz, who won the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics, was born in Hungary and is an academician of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
On October 3, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences announced that the 2023 Nobel Prize in Physics will be awarded to Pierre Agostini, Ferenc Krausz and Anne Loulier (Anne L’Huillier) for their achievements in the fields of attosecond physics and electronics – their use of experimental methods to generate attosecond light pulses to study the electronic dynamics of matter.
图/ANDERS WIKLUND-TT NEWS AGENCY-AP-MTI
This is also the second Nobel Prize won by Hungary in 2023.
图/Tamás Kovács-MTI
Ferenc Krausz, 61, is the director of the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Munich, the director of the Department of Experimental Physics at Ludwig Maximilians University, and an academician of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. In 2001, Ferenc Krausz and his colleagues were the first to study and test attosecond light pulses. They are committed to the research of ultra-fast laser technology. His experimental results include the successful isolation of a single light pulse with a duration of 650 attoseconds, which provides an important means for studying electron motion and energy changes. Ferenc Krausz and his research partners have been nominated for the Nobel Prize since 2015.
(Compiled by: Li Ziyue)
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2023-10-04 10:10:58