Ultrafast Phenomena XVI, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2009
Proceedings of the 16th International Conference, Palazzo dei Congressi Stresa, Italy, June 9--13, 2008

Springer Series in Chemical Physics Series, Vol. 92

Coordinators: Corkum Paul, de Silvestri Sandro, Nelson Keith A., Riedle Eberhard, Schoenlein Robert W.

Language: English

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Ultrafast phenomena xvi (hardback): proceedings of the 16th international conference, palazzo dei congressi stresa, italy, june 9--13, 2008 book
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1031 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback

Ultrafast Phenomena XVI presents the latest advances in ultrafast science, including both ultrafast optical technology and the study of ultrafast phenomena. It covers picosecond, femtosecond and attosecond processes relevant to applications in physics, chemistry, biology, and engineering. Ultrafast technology has a profound impact in a wide range of applications, amongst them biomedical imaging, chemical dynamics, frequency standards, material processing, and ultrahigh speed communications. This book summarizes the results presented at the 16th International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena and provides an up-to-date view of this important and rapidly advancing field.

Attosecond and High-Order Harmonic Generation and Measurement, Atomic and Molecular Physics.- Ultrafast X-ray and Electron Science.- Correlated Electron Systems, Magnetization and Spin Dynamics.- Physics - Condensed Phase and Low Dimensional Systems.- Chemistry - Condensed Phase.- Chemistry - Advanced Spectroscopy, Molecular Control, Hydrogen Bonding, Liquids and Interfaces.- Biological Systems, Molecular Light Harvesting and Charge-Transfer Complexes.- THz Science and Technology, Nano-Optics and Plasmonics.- Novel Pulsed Sources: oscillators, amplifiers, nonlinear mixing.- Frequency Combs and Waveform Synthesis.- Optics, Optoelectronics, Measurement, Diagnostics and Instrumentation.- Applications of Ultrashort Pulses.

Paul Corkum: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Science Group Leader at Steacie of the National Research Council, he is a member of the Royal Societies of London and of Canada. He was the recipient of the Optical Society of America's Charles H. Townes award and the IEEE's Quantum electronics award in 2005. In 2006 he received the American Physical Society's Arthur L. Schawlow Prize. Corkum’s research launched attosecond science. After studying the interaction of intense light pulses with atoms and molecules he and his group proposed how atomic and molecular gases can be used to produce attosecond pulses. In 2002 they measured the motion of hydrogen atoms in a hydrogen molecular ion with a timing precision of 200-attoseconds and a spatial precision of 0.02 Angstroms. In 2004 they demonstrated how attosecond technology can be used to image the highest occupied molecular orbital of Nitrogen. More recently they were able to strobe the attosecond motion of an electron in a hydrogen molecule almost instantaneously as the molecule breaks.

Sandro De Silvestri: He is professor at the Department of Physics of Politecnico in Milan, Italy. He is presently director of the European Large Scale Infrastructure "Center for Ultrafast Science and Biomedical Optics (CUSBO)", within the program of providing access to europen reasearch groups. He is also director of the "Centre of Ultrafast and Ultraintense Optical Science" (ULTRAS) of CNR-INFM. He is Fellow of the Optical Society ofAmerica and he is member of organising committee of several international congress in the field of photonics and ultrafast phenomena. He has made a number of significant contributions to the field of "Ultrafast Phenomena", extending for a period of about 25 years, in a variety of topics such as: (i) coherent vibrational spectroscopy; (ii) development of techniques for the generation of few optical cycle pulses either with high energy or tunable from near-IR to visible; (iii) study of ultrafast dyn

Current status report on ultrafast phenomena Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras