The Max-Planck Research Prize 2003 rewards an INTAS granteeDecember 16, 2003INTAS is pleased to congratulate Prof. Klaas Bergmann who, on 26 November 2003, as well as 11 other scientists from Germany, United States, Israel and Canada, won a Max-Planck Research Prize 2003 (Max Planck Forschungspreis fuer Internationale Kooperation 2003). This prize rewards a scientist who carried out, with his co-workers at the University of Kaiserslautern, research in the modern field of experimental quantum optics with lasers. This includes the preparation, study and application of processes for the manipulation, steering and control of atomic and molecular matter by strong coherent radiation, as it is provided by powerful pulsed laser systems in the regime of up to several GW/cm2. INTAS is pleased to have supported his research work within the project 991-0019. The present cooperation comprises scientists from the Institute of Physics of the Ukraine National Academy of Sciences, the Physics Department of the University of Bourgogne (France), the Institute for Physical Research of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, and the Department of Optics (Institute of Physics) of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Started in May 2000, the consortium succeeded, in 3 years, in demonstrating the applicability of quantum optical methodologies for the control of atomic and molecular population distributions, among which quantum state preparation with future applications in quantum computing, ionization and dissociation of molecules with potential use in biological applications or configurations with non-linear optical response in molecular systems. As Prof. Bergmann said to Prof. Helmut Bokemeyer, INTAS Scientific Officer for Physics, "The results obtained within the INTAS funded project made their cooperative research efforts more visible to the international scientific community". INTAS aims to promote research between European institutes and laboratories from the New Independent States of the former Soviet Union to gain added value from international cooperation for the European Research Area. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Science Research Departments
Earth Science Alternative Energy | Anthropology and Archaeology | Earthquakes and Volcanoes | Environment and Nature News | Global Warming | High-Energy and Particle Physics | Ozone Hole | Scientists Slow Light | Tsunami Space Science Astronomy and Space News | Black Holes | Chandra X-Ray Observatory | Extrasolar Planets | Hubble Telescope | International Space Station | Jupiter Galileo Mission | Jupiter Cassini Mission Flyby | Mars Exploration | Mars Odyssey 2001 | Mars Global Surveyor | Mars Polar Lander | Mars Climate Orbiter | Mars Pathfinder | Meteors and Asteroids | Mir Space Station | NEAR Asteroid Probe Mission | Pluto Planet Debate | Search for Extraterrestrial Life | Space Shuttle Program | Space Shuttle Mission: STS-102 | Space Weather Life Science Animal News | Biotechnology and Genetics | Brain Research | Human Cloning | Dinosaur and Fossil Discoveries | Endangered Species | Gene Therapy | Genetically Modified Food | Stem Cell Research | Whales and Whaling |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||