January 30, 2020 Aula Amaldi Dipartimento di Fisica: Fondazione Sapienza - Tomassoni Chisesi Physics Prize

Italian
Thursday, 30 January, 2020
 

15.00 - Winner over 40 category:
Prof. Giulia Galli
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering, The University of Chicago
USA

 

Light-activated matter: from sustainability to quantum information science
We discuss several results of first principles, quantum mechanical calculations aimed at understanding and predicting light-activated processes in condensed matter. Our objective is to tackle two outstanding challenges: designing sustainable materials to efficiently capture solar energy and enable technologies deployable in both developed and developing countries, and inventing materials to build novel sensors and computers, to move in earnest into the quantum information age.

 

 
  Giulia Galli

16.00 - Winner under 40 category:
Prof. Alexander Szameit
Institute of Physics, University of Rostock
Germany

 

Topological Photonics
In the context of photonics, topology has emerged as an abstract, yet surprisingly powerful, new paradigm for controlling the flow of light. As such, it holds great promise for a wide range of advanced applications, from scatter-free routing and switching of light along arbitrary three-dimensional trajectories to long-distance transmission of slow-light waves. In my talk, I will present an introduction to topology in photonics, with a particular focus on our work on the implementation of photonic Floquet topological insulators. The purpose is to review these and other recent developments, to discuss potential applications and to stimulate new conceptual ideas.

 

 
  Alexander Szameit

Premio Tomassoni Chisesi

 

L' Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza" - Piazzale Aldo Moro 5, 00185 Roma