Applied Physics/Physics Colloquium: Dmitri Basov - "Shedding nano-light on quantum materials"
Department of Physics
370 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford, CA 94305
201
Optical spectroscopies have contributed immensely to the present understanding of metals, semiconductors and superconductors. Unfortunately, optics encounters problems when it comes to “seeing” effects at length scales below the diffraction limit of light and also with probing physics outside of the light cone. Both capabilities are highly desirable for the exploration of new quantum materials. Over the last decade or so, our group has deployed scanning-probe optical methods that have extended tera-Hertz, infrared and optical experiments to the nano-scale and beyond the light cone. In this talk, I will discuss recent examples of the progress we have made in understanding the electronic phenomena in atomically layered van der Waals materials, all empowered by deeply subdiffractional nano-light.
Dmitri N. Basov (PhD 1991) is a Higgins professor and Chair of the Department of Physics at Columbia University [http://infrared.cni.columbia.edu], the Director of the DOE Energy Frontiers Research Center on Programmable Quantum Materials [since 2018] and co-director of Max Planck Society – New York Center for Nonequilibrium Quantum Phenomena [2018-2030]. He has served as a professor (1997-2016) and Chair (2010-2015) of Physics, University of California San Diego. Research interests include: physics of quantum materials, superconductivity, two-dimensional materials, infrared nano-optics. Prizes and recognitions: Sloan Fellowship (1999), Genzel Prize (2014), Humboldt research award (2009), Frank Isakson Prize, American Physical Society (2012), Moore Investigator (2014, 2020), K.J. Button Prize (2019), Vannevar Bush Faculty Fellowship (U.S. Department of Defense, 2019), National Academy of Sciences (2020).