Wolfgang Ketterle
homepage:http://web.mit.edu/physics/people/faculty/ketterle_wolfgang.html
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Description

Wolfgang Ketterle’s group—at last count nearly two dozen — manipulates and observes atomic phenomena at ultracold temperatures. Ketterle received a Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Munich in 1986. After postdoctoral work at the Max-Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany, the University of Heidelberg and at MIT, he joined the physics faculty at MIT in 1993.

Ketterle was one of three scientists jointly awarded the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics for "the achievement of Bose-Einstein condensation in dilute gases of alkali atoms, and for early fundamental studies of the properties of the condensates". In addition to the 2001 Nobel Prize in Physics (with E.A. Cornell and C.E. Wieman), he has received a David and Lucile Packard Fellowship (1996), the Rabi Prize of the American Physical Society (1997), the Gustav-Hertz Prize of the German Physical Society (1997), the Discover Magazine Award for Technological Innovation (1998), the Fritz London Prize in Low Temperature Physics (1999), the Dannie-Heineman Prize of the Academy of Sciences, Göttingen, Germany (1999), the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics (2000).


Lectures:

lecture
flag Bose-Einstein Condensates: The Coldest Matter in the Universe
as author at  MIT World Series: Nobel Laureate Speakers,
5969 views
  lecture
flag New Frontiers with Ultracold Gases
as author at  MIT World Series: Nobel Laureate Speakers,
3155 views