visual
visual

세미나

  • HOME
  • >
  • 소식
  • >
  • 세미나

Quantum- & Nano-Photonics" 세미나 시리즈

2020.11.10 13:37

admin 조회 수:4232

날짜 2020-11-17 12:00 
연사  
장소 Online(Zoom) 

"Quantum- & Nano-Photonics" 세미나 시리즈 안내

본 세미나 시리즈는 양자 및 나노광학 분야의 해외 연구자를 초청하여 최신 연구 동향을 파악하고 상호 교류하기 위해 마련되었습니다.

관심있는 분은 누구나 참석 가능하니 적극적인 참여 부탁드립니다.     

1. 연사: Prof. Qiang Lin (Univ. of Rochester, USA)

2. 발표제목: Lithium niobate integrated photonics

3. 방식: Zoom webinar

4. 일시: 11월 17일 화요일 오후 12시

5. 등록:  Zoom  정보를 받아보시기 위해서는  “ 참석하고자 하시는 세미나 제목   “본인의 이름 / 소속  

     nplab.kaist@gmail.com    11   15 일까지 보내주시기 바랍니다  

     등록자 정보를 취합하여  11   16 일에  zoom 접속  정보를 메일로 회신해드리겠습니다.
    
좀 더 자세한 정보와 세미나 초록은 저희 협업연구실 홈페이지에서 확인하실 수 있습니다.
 
 

Here we announce our “Quantum- and Nano-Photonics Seminar Series”.

This is the online seminar series organized by KAIST Nanophotonics Cross-Generation Collaborative Lab with the aim to offer a place for the discussion about the recent progress in Quantum- and Nano-Photonics from fundamental to device applications. Experts on various subfields of Quantum- and Nano-Photonics will be invited to give a talk. This seminar is open to anyone who is interested in this topic. 

The information for the next talk is given below.

1.     Speaker: Prof. Qiang Lin (Univ. of Rochester, USA)

2.     Title: Lithium niobate integrated photonics 

3.     Venue: Zoom webinar

4.     Data/Time: Nov 17th  12:00 PM

5.   Registration is required. For registration, please send the following information to nplab.kaist@gmail.com. (due: 11/15).

- The title of talk that you want to attend (for this first talk, the tile is “ Physics and applications of soliton microcombs”)

- Your name / affiliation

- We will send you the information to access this webinar on Nov. 16th

 
More detailed information including the abstract can be found on the below linked webpage.
 
5faa15383fc96f4d2c2d69bc.jpg

 

 

 

번호 날짜 연사 제목
공지 2025-02-24 16:00    2025년 봄학기 콜로키움 안내
공지 2025-02-27 16:00    2025년 봄 물리학과 특별세미나 (광학/응집물리 분야)
554 2016-04-08 13:30    Theoretical Overview of Iron-based superconductors and its future
553 2016-04-08 16:00    Spectroscopic studies of iron-based superconductors : what have we learned?
552 2016-04-12 16:00    Confinement of Superconducting Vortices in Magnetic Force Microscopy
551 2016-04-18 15:30    First Principles Approaches for Intermolecular Interactions: From Gas-Phase Dimers to Liquid Water and Molecular Crystal Polymorphism file
550 2016-04-19 14:00    Nonlocal collisional electron transport in partially ionized plasma generation, structure, and stability
549 2016-04-26 16:00    Transport spectroscopy for electronic bands in carbon-based nanomaterials with weak-bond contacts
548 2016-04-28 15:00    Lattice/Spin/Charge Coupling in 5d Pyrochlore Cd2Os2O7
547 2016-05-11 16:00    The quest for novel high-temperature superconductors---Prospects and progress in iridates
546 2016-05-13 13:30    Aperiodic crystals in low dimensions
545 2016-05-13 16:00    Graphene analogue in (111)- BaBiO3 bilayer heterostructures for topological electronics
544 2016-05-16 16:00    Tuning microwave cavities with biased nonlinear dielectrics for axion searches
543 2016-05-17 11:00    The CERN Resonant WISP Search: Development, Results and Lesson-Learned
542 2016-05-19 15:00    The CERN Resonant WISP Search: Development, Results and Lesson-Learned
541 2016-05-19 16:00    Nonlinear/quantum optical effect in silicon nano-photonics
540 2016-05-24 16:00    Electronic and magnetic properties of 2D transition-metal thiophosphates and tunability of magnetic order with carrier density
539 2016-05-31 16:00    Understanding 3D tokamak physics towards advanced control of toroidal plasma
538 2016-06-01 10:30    Welcome to Nature Photonics
537 2016-06-01 16:00    Laboratory experiments relevant to mesospheric clouds, Saturn’s rings & astrophysical jets
536 2016-06-14 15:00    No-Insulation High Temperature Superconductor Magnet Technology for Compact, Reliable, and Low-Cost High Field DC Magnets
535 2016-06-14 16:00    Photonic quantum network based on multimode squeezed vacuums and single-photon subtraction