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Centre for Atom Optics and Ultrafast Spectroscopy

Ultrafast Science

The ability to generate and manipulate ultrashort pulses of laser light is a relatively recent achievement. At CAOUS we can generate intense laser pulses as short as 30 femtoseconds*, a timescale that is essentially beyond ordinary human experience; ultrafast. This is, however, the fundamental timescale for many atomic, electronic, and molecular processes. The Ultrafast group at Swinburne is made up of two main areas: Ultrafast Spectroscopy and High-order Harmonic Generation (HHG). Both of these use ultrafast pulses of laser radiation to induce linear and nonlinear effects in atoms, molecules and semiconductor nanostructures.

In Ultrafast spectroscopy we use these pulses of light to study dynamical processes that are of interest and significance in physics, chemistry, and biology. We are currently studying semiconductor quantum dots and quantum wells, carotenoid molecules, light emitting polymers, and other photoactive molecules. These materials are of particular interest for potential light emitting devices, photovoltaic devices, and for understanding the fundamental processes occurring.

In High-order Harmonic Generation we are developing a system where we use the ultrashort pulses of laser light to generate coherent pulses of extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and soft X-ray radiation. This project is part of the Australain Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coherent X-ray Science, and will eventually provide an X-ray source that will be used to image biologically important molecules.



The team

Academic and Research Staff
Lap Van Dao
Peter Hannaford
Jeff Davis

Students
Tra My Do (PhD)
David McDonald (PhD)
Sven Teichmann (PhD)
Chris Hall (PhD)

Former students
Xiaoming Wen (PhD)
Craig Lincoln (PhD)
Shannon Whitlock (Honours)
Chris Hall (Honours)
Patrissa Eckle
Twan van Lippen

 

*There are more femtoseconds in one second than there have been seconds in the past 30 million years